The Collective Security Treaty Organization and NATO: “Never the twain shall meet”
Brynhildur Ingimarsdóttir
Lokaverkefni til MA-gráðu í alþjóðasamskiptum
Félagsvísindasvið
The Collective Security Organization and NATO:
“Never the twain shall meet”
Brynhildur Ingimarsdóttir
Lokaverkefni til MA-gráðu í alþjóðasamskiptum
Leiðbeinandi: Alyson J.K. Bailes
Stjórnmálafræðideild
Félagsvísindasvið Háskóla Íslands
September 2011
Ritgerð þessi er lokaverkefni til MA-gráðu í alþjóðasamskiptum og er óheimilt að
afrita ritgerðina á nokkurn hátt nema með leyfi rétthafa.
© Brynhildur Ingimarsdóttir 2011
Reykjavík, Ísland 2011
ii
Útdráttur
Tilgangur þessa lokaverkefnis er að beina athygli að svæðisbundnum
öryggissamtökum, nánar tiltekið Samvarnarbandalagið (e. Collective Security
Treaty Organization, CSTO) og ósk þess eftir að efla og útvíkka marghliða tengsl
við önnur svæðisbundin öryggissamtök, nánar tiltekið Atlantshafsbandalaginu
(North Atlantic Treaty Organization, NATO). Markmið mitt með þessari rannsókn
er að draga athygli að hinu lítt þekkta og rannsakaða Samvarnarbandalagi; að
finna ástæður fyrir því hvers vegna og hvernig það vill koma á marghliða
tengslum við Atlantshafsbandalagið og hvers vegna ósk þess eftir stofnanabundnu
samstarfi hefur verið hafnað fram til þessa; og spyrja hvort samstarf milli þessara
tveggja stofnana í ákveðnum málaflokkum geti yfirhöfuð talist líklegt.
Þessar spurningar eru rannsakaðar í gegnum þrjár vel þekktar kenningar í
alþjóðasamskiptum, þ.e.a.s. raunsæishyggju, stofnanahyggju og félagslegri
mótunarhyggju. Kenningarnar eru notaðar til að meta styrkleika og veikleika
hvorrar stofnunar fyrir sig, í hvaða ljósi þær sjá hvor aðra og einnig til að útskýra
hvort samstarf milli stofnannna sé líklegt.
Í niðurstöðunum kemur fram að þrátt fyrir að til séu ýmsar hagnýtar
ástæður fyrir stofnanirnar að vinna saman í ákveðnum málaflokkum, t.d. í
Afganistan, þá séu of margir þættir sem koma í veg fyrir að stofnanirnar geti
komið á formlegum tengslum sem myndu leiða til þýðingarmikils samstarfs til
skamms og meðallangs tíma litið.
iii
Abstract
The focus of this Master‟s thesis is on a collective regional security organization,
namely the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), and its desire to
enhance and expand multilateral ties with another regional security organization,
namely the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). My aim throughout this
research is to draw attention to the little-known and under-researched CSTO; to
find reasons as to why and how it wants to establish multilateral ties with NATO,
and why its desire to enhance institutional cooperation has been denied up until
now; and to enquire whether such cooperation is possible at all.
These questions are explored through the lenses of three prominent
theories of international relations, i.e. realism, neoliberal institutionalism and
social constructivism, that are used to assess the institutions‟ respective strengths
and weaknesses, their visions of each other and also to explain whether it is
plausible for the organizations to cooperate.
The conclusions find that in the near to mid-term, that although there are
some practical reasons for the organizations to cooperate in specific issue areas,
e.g. Afghanistan, there are too many factors that prevent the organizations from
establishing formal ties which would lead to meaningful cooperation.
iv
Preface
My thesis corresponds to 30 ECTS credits and is written in the discipline of
International Relations at the University of Iceland under the supervision of
Alyson J. K. Bailes. I have been interested in the relationship of Russia with the
West ever since I started my studies in the field of international relations. I had
always felt that Russia did not receive enough attention in the literature and that
when it did receive attention, it was usually viewed with suspicion and mistrust. I
wanted to take a close look at Russian interests and foreign policy and decided
that the Collective Security Treaty Organization would be an interesting research
sucbject, both because of Russia‟s dominance within the organization and because
of the simple fact that it was poorly understood in western international relations
literature and had not been researched to any great extent. It has been a great
experience and has provided me with great insight into the workings of both the
CSTO and NATO and also of great power politics in modern times.
I would first and foremost like to thank my advisor, Ms. Alyson Bailes for
the invaluable assistance and guidance that she so selflessly provided me with
during the course of my research. I would also like to thank Ms. Bailes for
introducing me to Pál Dunay and Andrew Cottey, who both provided me with
valuable insights and information, for which I am very grateful.
Finally, I would like to thank my partner, Arnar Steinn Þorsteinsson, for
his patience and insights throughout the entire process and last but not least my
family.
v
Table of content
Útdráttur ...................................................................................................... ii
Abstract ....................................................................................................... iii
Preface ......................................................................................................... iv
Introduction ........................................................................................................... 1
Purpose and research questions .......................................................................... 3
Methodological framework ................................................................................ 5
Limitations .......................................................................................................... 7
Structure of the thesis ......................................................................................... 7
I. Theoretical approach ....................................................................................... 8
1.1. Realism ........................................................................................................ 9
1.1.1. Cooperation and Institutions in a Realist World ............................. 11
1.2. Neoliberal Institutionalism ........................................................................ 13
1.2.1. Cooperation and Institutions in a Neoliberal Institutionalist World14
1.3. Social Constructivism ................................................................................ 15
1.3.1. Cooperation and Institutions in a Social Constructivist World ....... 18
II. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) ..................................... 20
2.1. Brief historical background ....................................................................... 20
2.1.1. The End of the Cold War and Transformation of NATO’s Role ...... 21
2.2. NATO‟s Eastern Policy ............................................................................. 23
2.2.1. The Partnership for Peace ............................................................... 23
2.2.2. The Founding Act and the Permanent Joint Council ...................... 25
2.2.3. The NATO-Russia Council (NRC) ................................................... 26
2.2.4. NATO’s expansion perceived as a threat by Russia ........................ 27
2.2.5. Recent developments in NATO/US relations with Russia ................ 28
2.3. Strengths and weaknesses ......................................................................... 30
III. The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) ............................. 36
3.1. Brief historical background ....................................................................... 36
3.2. From CST to CSTO ................................................................................... 38
3.2.1. The CSTO’s main activities ............................................................. 40
3.2.2. Russia’s preponderance within the CSTO ....................................... 43
3.2.3. The balancing and bandwagoning behaviour of the CSTO’s member
states .............................................................................................. 45
3.3. Strengths and weaknesses in a theoretical perspective ............................. 51
vi
IV. To cooperate or not to cooperate ................................................................. 59
4.1. Reasons to cooperate ................................................................................. 61
4.2. Reasons not to cooperate ........................................................................... 64
Conclusion ............................................................................................................ 67
Bibliography ........................................................................................................ 71
List of abbreviations (acronyms) ....................................................................... 82
vii
Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet,
Till Earth and Sky stand presently at God's great Judgment Seat;
But there is neither East nor West, Border, nor Breed, nor Birth,
When two strong men stand face to face,
tho' they come from the ends of the earth!
(Rudyard Kipling, 1892)
1
Introduction
During the Cold War the Northern hemisphere was divided by two main security
blocs. One of them was the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), formed
in 1949. Its initial role was as a collective defence system formed by twelve
western countries and led by the alliance‟s single superpower, the United States of
America (USA), with its primary threat being posed by the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics (USSR). The other bloc was formed by the Warsaw Pact
which was established in 1955 as a response to NATO‟s creation, where the
Soviet Union and its allies formed a defence coalition in order to counter the
West. The world system during the Cold War was therefore a bipolar one where
the US and the USSR played leading roles.
With the end of the Cold War, it was hoped that the gap splitting the West
from the East would be bridged with the creation of a closer relationship between
former rivals. As the Warsaw Pact ceased to exist with the disintegration of the
Soviet Union, it seemed logical that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) would disappear as well; making room for the establishment of a new
security structure encompassing members of NATO and other European non-
members. What emerged in contrast was a unipolar world order dominated by the
US, while NATO remained in being. Many viewed the US as having „won‟ the
Cold War, overshadowing the fact that former states of the Soviet Union had
wanted independence and full sovereignty, which was even initiated and fully
supported by Russia. During the first years after the collapse of the Soviet Union,
Russia sought closer ties with countries in the West and placed emphasis on the
fact that the country was and always had been part of Europe. Russia did not,
however, gain entry at the time (or even receive a serious offer of entry) into the
West-based European institutions, and before long the former imperial state began
re-constructing economic and military structures with some of the former states of
the Soviet Union.
2
“Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet” –
words written by Kipling in 1892 - could have been written in the 21st century, as
today‟s world order remains predominantly split in two halves that do not seem to
be able to meet. Cultural differences might be the most significant cause of this
separation rather than any measurable geographic distance. With new
technologies and fast moving globalization, one might have assumed that cultural
gaps would have disappeared and growing multicultural societies would lead to
greater understanding between different civilizations. This is, however, easier said
than done. Indeed, relations between former antagonists of the Cold War still
seem to be tainted by constraint, tension and turbulence. Even though at times
there have been clear openings for closer ties to be established, something has
always come in the way of all actors meeting on common ground in order to
construct a robust institutional relationship between equals. It is now more than
twenty years after the end of the Cold War and the world is still accustomed to a
planet split in halves,1 making a divided world the rule rather than a deviation. Is
it subjective mistrust and misjudgement that have conditioned and kept these
divisions alive; or are deep-rooted obstacles impeding closer relationships
between, notably, the eastern and the western parts of the world? The writings of
Kipling suggest that the West and the East will never meet and today the
suggestion still seems to hold true. What can explain such a division, and whether
it is doomed to remain for the foreseeable future, are questions that this thesis will
in part try to answer.
What follows is a description of two contemporary international
organizations, specifically the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO)2
and NATO. The thesis discusses the possibility of constructing a multilateral
relationship between the two entities. For years now the idea for such a
partnership has been on the table, but as yet it has not been put into action. Since
the events of September 11 2001, Russia has been pushing for a closer partnership
of equals with NATO, and pressing especially for building collaboration through
1 Even though this thesis concentrates on the North-Western and Eastern parts of the world, it is to
be kept in mind that many would argue that the world order is today multipolar with three or four
divisions, with the rise of China and India, or „the South‟ in general. The global center of
economic and political gravity has slowly been shifting away from the North Atlantic region
toward Asia and the Pacific; boosted with a growing desire of change in the global world order. 2 Constisting of Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan.
3
its own regional military organization, CSTO. It has for a long time seemed
logical for Russian representatives to gather all forces possible and to build a
formalized mechanism between organizations in order to tackle new threats and
security challenges, essentially emanating from Afghanistan.
This thesis will explore the motivations behind the CSTO wanting to
cooperate with NATO and why the latter has been reluctant about the idea. The
wide range of potential explanations and interpretations will be structured by
applying three main theories of International Relations (IR), which are first
presented in the theoretical chapter. It will be argued that relations between
NATO and member states of the CSTO cannot be fully described and explained
with the main IR theories of realism and liberalism. Social constructivism, a
theory new to the field and still in the shaping, will therefore also be used to add
some insight into these relationships. The three theories will be used first to
analyse the motivation for each organization‟s existence (and in NATO‟s case, its
longevity), and to explore the strengths and weaknesses of each. Then the same
analytical structure will be applied to understanding the apparent disparity
between the NATO view and the CSTO view of their mutual relations.
Purpose and research questions
Much research has been done on the relationship of NATO with specific states,
such as Russia, which is the leading nation within the CSTO.3 There is, however,
a gap in social science literature on the possible interaction between the
organizations of NATO and the CSTO. My attention was first drawn to the
subject during the Spring of 2010, when I was writing an essay about Russia and
NATO relations since the end of the Cold War. Since then, I have been searching
for reasons why a proposition by the CSTO to cooperate directly through its
institutional framework with NATO has been rejected until now. The reasons do
not seem to be clear-cut or even wholly justified and therefore I intend to find
what has stood in the way of cooperation taking place. One of the main purposes
for writing about the CSTO is therefore to shed new light on the organization and
3 e.g. Trenin, D., Russia Redefines Itself and Its Relations with the West, Washington Quarterly,
30(2), (2007), p. 95-105; s.a., Where US and Russian Interests Overlap, Current History, 107(709),
(2008), p. 219-224; s.a., Nato and Russia: Partnership or Peril?, Current History, 108, (2009).
4
explore the reasons behind NATO‟s declining to collaborate multilaterally with
the CSTO.
The purpose of my thesis can be summed up as follows and will be further
defined as the sub-questions of the main research question are elaborated:
To examine the roles of NATO and the CSTO since their
institutionalization up until today and discuss their strengths and
weaknesses.
To question whether there is objective ground for developing cooperation
between the two. Namely to examine what lies behind CSTO‟s wishes to
cooperate mulitalaterally with NATO and to understand the latter‟s
reluctance to establish such ties with the CSTO.
The research question for this thesis is thus the following:
Why has a framework of cooperation between NATO and CSTO not been
established, and is such cooperation possible at all?
This research question implies several sub-questions that will be developed
throughout the thesis:
What are the current roles of these organizations?
What is the role of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization? How has its role been
defined since the end of the Cold War? Is it a meaningful institution in the 21st
century, or an outdated body trying to find a new role since the end of the Cold
War?
What is the role of the Collective Security Treaty Organization? How has it
developed since its inception and what is its purpose? Is it a meaningful institution
which works as a collectivity taking all member states‟ interests into account, or is
it only a “paper organization” which Russia uses as a tool to pursue its own
interests?
What are the reasons for cooperation?
Which actors want NATO and CSTO to cooperate? To what extent are their
motives based on a realist quest for specific security advantages; or on a
commitment to institutional methods of problem-solving; or on a subjective sense
of community within the CSTO or with NATO or both? How plausible are the
5
alleged reasons in practical terms, especially when measured against what is
known of the potential outcomes of cooperation?
What have been the obstacles to cooperation?
Do justified reasons exist for this non-cooperation? If so, what are they? Do they
include realist calculations based on the nature, and experience, of past and
present bilateral relations between Russia and/or other post-Soviet Union states
and NATO since the end of the Cold War? And/or on the nature of relations
between Russia and other post-Soviet Union states; or relations among the states
of Central Asia who are members of the CSTO? Or are reasons to be found in a
divergence of specific interests and/or difference in values – between or within the
organizations; together with practical differences of institutional structure,
governance and achievement? Can it be that parties involved are tainted by old
subjective thinking about identities and communities persisting from the Cold
War? Is it therefore possible that contemporary interactions in the arena of
international relations between the parties concerned are characterized by
misunderstandings or misjudgements?
Methodological framework
Qualitative research methods
In this thesis a qualitative research method will be used as it provides an efficient
method of analysis. Qualitative research can be defined as “a research strategy
that usually emphasizes words rather than quantification in the collection and
analysis of data. As a research strategy, it is inductivist, constructionist, and
interpretivist”.4 (Bryman, 2001, p. 264). The study will therefore focus primarily
on understanding the chosen topic through collected data, and will use empirical
theories of international relations studies in order to achieve a clear explanation of
the current situation, to cast light on why a framework of cooperation between
NATO and the CSTO has not been established, and to predict whether it would be
beneficial for such a framework to be set in place.
4 Alan Bryman, Social Research Methods, New York: Oxford University Press, 2001, p. 264.
6
Gathering resources
There is a striking lack of published studies on the Collective Security Treaty
Organization, or as the specialist Tevan Poghosyan correctly pointed out in early
July 2011:
On the issue of the CSTO there are almost no available special substantial
analytical developments or serious study works. […] Indicative for example
is that the CSTO plot is absent in the subject of the leading Think tanks of
key states.5
Sources focusing directly on the organization per se as well as sources comparing
CSTO with NATO are very few, as are sources that explore the feasibility of the
two organizations working together. There are, however, some research institutes
and publications that have focused on the organization in the last years and
produced materials available to the public, such as the Central Asia-Caucasus
Institute Analyst, the Central European Journal of International and Security
Studies, the East West Review, the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment
(FFI), the Russian Analytical Digest, the Stockholm International Peace Research
Institute (SIPRI) and the Valdai International Discussion Club, - to name a few.
This thesis is based on numerous documents including official materials from the
websites of the organizations and states under study, historical records, relevant
publications in books and scientific journals, as well as materials from
conferences. Media coverage was also an important source as the subject of this
thesis relates to contemporary events.
Point of view
My thesis will cover both the views of the CSTO and NATO on the subject of
possible collaboration. In this regard, I will focus on trying to find the real
motives of the CSTO in wanting to establish multilateral ties with NATO. I will
then explore the reasons for NATO‟s negativity on the subject. In this manner, it
is hoped to obtain a viewpoint of both sides in order to establish some conclusions
as to whether cooperation would be possible and if so, to what extent would it be
beneficial.
5 Tevan Poghosyan, The CSTO is in search within strategic directions, European dialogue, July 4,
2011 http://eurodialogue.org/The-CSTO-is-in-Search-within-Strategic-Directions, accessed July 8,
2011.
7
Limitations
The focus of the thesis will essentially be on these two organizations and their
interaction with each other. In order to avoid vagueness and the risk of becoming
too broad, each historical event will be looked at in connection with the topic and
may sometimes be only briefly alluded to in terms of its possible contribution to
today‟s situation.
One of the main limitations is my inability to understand Russian. Finding
relevant documents and analysis from CSTO member countries in either English
or French has also proven difficult, but some have been either written or translated
from Russian into the above languages. The overall objective was to avoid biased
reasoning or one-sided understanding of the topic and a conscious effort was
therefore made to critically analyze different documents considering the lack of
balanced sources.
Structure of the thesis
The thesis is split into five different parts. Part I covers IR theories that will be
applied when analyzing the chosen subject. Part II and III describe respectively
the roles of NATO and the CSTO with their strengths and weaknesses, and part
IV sets out the reasons why CSTO wants cooperation and why NATO has
declined it up until now.
8
I. Theoretical approach
The discipline of international relations is young. Teaching in the field only began
at the beginning of the twentieth century and most renowned schools in the field
were for a long time situated either in the US or the United Kingdom.6 Thus,
theories in international relations are still in the shaping, but more importantly, the
grand majority of them have been established by western analysts. Knowing that,
a special effort will be made in this thesis to research and analyse sources
emanating from other parts of the world in order to avoid biased conceptions and
to form a balanced analysis on the subject.
Theories are an important tool in IR analysis as they set a clear framework
for developing arguments and judgements on actual phenomena. Up until today,
theorists within the IR school have not, however, been able to construct a
homogeneous theory that is able to explain everything about the actions and
reactions of different world actors. Instead, various theories have seen the light of
day; each has a different analytical approach towards a situation and, thus,
different interpretations can be made on the same subject. International affairs are
just too multifaceted and complex for practitioners to be able to adopt a one-
dimensional methodological and theoretical approach. This thesis, therefore,
builds on several theories that have been established within the study of
International Relations. The theories of realism, neoliberal institutionalism and
social constructivism will be used to seek explanations as to how the CSTO and
NATO behave in the international arena and towards each other. The set theories
will hopefully give some clarification on the organizations‟ actions and make
possible some predictions on whether a framework of cooperation between the
two would have positive effects.
6 Hedley Bull, “The Theory of International Politics, 1919-1969 (1972)*,” in James Der Derian
(ed.) International Theory: Critical Investigations (p. 181-211), (New York: New York University
Press, 1995), p. 208; Martin Hollis & Steve Smith, Explaining and Understanding International
Relations, (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990), p. 18.
9
1.1. Realism
A realist view of the international system is rather pessimistic.7 Realism describes
the world as being an arena where states are self-interested; trying at all costs to
take advantage of others.8 States are power-seeking, they compete for security,
and the possibility of war breaking out is always in the background.9 Thus, the
chance that states will ever fully trust each other are rather slim and according to
realists, “[g]enuine peace, or a world where states do not compete for power, is
not likely”.10
Mearsheimer, a contemporary neorealist, states that the theory of realism is
mainly built on five assumptions about the international system. The first is that
states act as independent units that have no central authority above them and thus
the international system is ruled by anarchy. The second assumption is that states
are capable of offensive military interventions, a reality which keeps other states
on guard. The third assumption realists make is that states can never be sure about
the intentions of other states. Intentions of states are also never immutable and can
quickly change which can lead to even more uncertainty. The fourth assumption is
that states are driven by a basic motive which is survival, and sovereignty is what
states seek to maintain at all cost. The fifth and last assumption is that states think
strategically and are therefore rational.11
Realism emphasizes the role of states
which it views as being the primordial actors within international relations.12
The
realist school has, however, not been able to prove that its theories cannot be used
on actors other than states.13
As realism also focuses on military power, it is only
logical to use realist theories when two military organizations are being analyzed.
7 For further readings on the theory of realism, consider the two most influential western realist
theorists of the 20th century: Hans J. Morgenthau and Kenneth N. Waltz. See Hans J. Morgenthau,
Politics Among Nations: The Struggle for Power and Peace, 5th ed., (New York: Knopf, 1973);
and Kenneth N. Waltz, Theory of International Politics, (New York: Random House, 1979). 8 John T. Mearsheimer, The False Promise of International Institutions, International Security,
19(3), (Winter, 1994-1995), p. 9. 9 ibid.
10 ibid.
11 John T. Mearsheimer, p. 10.
12 Tim Dunne & Brian C. Schmidt, “Realism,” in John Baylis & Steve Smith (ed.) The
Globalization of World Politics: An Introduction to international relations, 3rd edition (p. 161-
183), (New York: Oxford University Press, 2005), p. 164. 13
Douglas Lemke, Power Politics and Wars without States, American Journal of Political Science,
52(4), (October 2008), p. 774.
10
Furthermore, Shakleyina and Bogaturov state that realism has been a
leading theoretical approach adopted in Russia as it has helped the intellectual and
political community in defining the country‟s interests and priorities in
international relations, and provided a necessary analysis of the world order‟s
structure and polarity.14
The Russian leadership has, since the end of the Cold
War, been trying to develop an adequate strategy to adopt in foreign affairs. Many
within Russia‟s political elite put an emphasis on world order and power centres,
and have been advocating for the return of a multipolar world within which Russia
would have a valuable status.15
The majority of Russian realists, unlike American
realists view today‟s unipolarity of the world system as “problematic and
harmful”.16
Political scientist Yakovlev wrote about the establishment of a new
bipolar world order but with a more complex polarity than in the previous
system.17
According to him, only one pole – the West – is relatively stable and
united whereas the rest of the world remains rather unstable:
It consists of autonomous units that lack a clear, well-articulated
understanding of their goals and priorities [...] [I]t is this lack of
understanding that explains why some of these units, such as Russia, China
and India, do not cooperate enough with each other, despite the obvious
possibility of gaining greater global influence through cooperation.18
The common position and the unity of the US and other western countries have
therefore made it possible for the West “to impose itself on others and to get away
with its promotion of western democratic and liberal ideals, even by means of
military intervention”.19
Yakovlev therefore draws the conclusion that there are
two future scenarios possible: “either the West will use its power potential to rule
the world unilaterally, or the non-western “periphery” will manage to unite and
act cohesively in order to make itself heard”.20
14
Tatyana A. Shakleyina & Aleksei D. Bogaturov, The Russian Realist school of international
relations, Communist and Post-Communist Studies, 37(1), (2004), p. 37. 15
Shakleyina, T.A. & Bogaturov, A.D., op.cit., p. 38. 16
ibid. 17
Qted in Shakleyina, T.A. & Bogaturov, A.D., op.cit., p. 46. See work of Yakovlev, A.G., I vse
zhe na gorizonte dvukhpolusny mir. Problemy Dal´nego Vostoka, 4 (2000). 18
ibid. 19
ibid. 20
ibid.
11
1.1.1. Cooperation and Institutions in a Realist World
Unlike liberals, who declare that international agreements and cooperation can be
achieved through mutual work within institutions, realists point to divergences of
interests among major players within world politics. Realism therefore seeks
explanations for constructing institutions through the ideas of self-benefit and
profit maximization, looking at the interaction of states and cooperation as a zero-
sum game where someone gains and another loses, rather than absolute gains
where everyone wins. Although states live in a competitive world, they do in
some cases seek cooperation. The neorealist branch within the realist school, also
known as structural realism, declares that powerful states essentially seek
cooperation when faced with a common threat.21
Cooperation among states has its
limits, however, because the logic of security competition always dominates and
no amount of cooperation seems to be able to eliminate it.22
Two factors,
according to John T. Mearsheimer, inhibit cooperation: the problem of
enforcement (or the fear of cheating), and the pursuit of relative gains (or zero-
sum thinking).23
This desire to gain relatively more than others makes it therefore
more appealing for states to cheat if it results in immediate gains.
Adding to this, as the international arena is anarchic there is no authority
above states and breaking the rules is hardly punishable. States are therefore likely
to cheat when it serves their interests, and they get away with it as there is no
authority that can monitor them when they do so. This lack of international
authority pushes states to live in a „self-help‟ system within which everyone needs
to look out for themselves.24
Self-help is generally understood to mean that states
will adopt unilateral competitive policies to protect their own interests.25
States
are also pushed to rely on themselves because it is not believed other states are
altruistic, i.e. that others would risk their own security to guarantee others‟
survival. If states were benign by nature, all could count on some other state to
come rescue them in times of need, not having to worry about their own survival.
21
John T. Mearsheimer, “Anarchy and the struggle for power,” in Karen A. Mingst & Jack L.
Snyder (ed.) Essential Readings in World Politics (p. 60-79), (New York & London: W.W. Norton
& Company, 2005 [2001]), p. 73. 22
John T. Mearsheimer, (Winter, 1994-1995), op.cit., p. 9. 23
Joseph Grieco, Robert Powell & Duncan Snidal, The Relative-Gains Problem for International
Cooperation, The American Political Science Review, 87(3), (September 1993), p. 729. 24
On more detailed definition of „self-help‟, see Kenneth N. Waltz, Theory of International
Politics, (New York: Random House, 1979), pp. 105-107, 111-112. 25
Kenneth N. Waltz, Theory of International Politics, op.cit., p. 111.
12
Such a policy is however too naïve according to realists, because states can never
be sure of other states‟ intentions and should therefore avoid depending on anyone
else. This works against cooperation and makes states wary of entering into
agreements with others. When states do enter into agreements (in cases of wanting
to increase their ability to defend themselves for example), they always fear the
possibility of others cheating.
Whereas states are the primordial actors within the international system,
institutions are regarded by realists as tools of the powerful to pursue their
interests and maximize their power. Thus, for realists, institutions only serve the
promotion of interests of particular states. They are means for actors to obtain
what they are reaching for. In that sense institutions can be useful, but they do not
become “autonomous in the sense of being more than a tool of statecraft”.26
Therefore, in a realist view, international institutions serve national rather than
international interests.27
Realists do admit that alliances have advantages for
states, as members get to rely on their allies‟ resources and joining efforts of
several states is more powerful and effective than actions of only one state. But
these same alliances also bring risks as members that are committed to defend an
ally might be drawn into wars that they would otherwise avoid.
For Russia, “the principle of national sovereignty remains a priority [...] [it
does] not want to become an object of “humanitarian intervention” led by NATO
or anybody else. Russia is not ready to play the role of a junior partner and follow
in the lockstep of the US”28
. Russia is the dominant leader within the CSTO as it
is the strongest military power amongst the member states taking part in the
organization. The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) is therefore
commonly viewed as the tool of Russia for promoting its interests, and it
functions primarily because of Russia‟s wish and ability to maintain a cooperative
military framework under its own leadership and control. Its role in contributing
armaments to other member states is well known and some have seen it as one of
the main reasons why these states have agreed to develop a multilateral
relationship with Russia.
26
Robert Jervis, Realism, Neoliberalism and Cooperation: Understanding the Debate,
International Security, 24(1), (Summer 1999), p. 43. 27
Kenneth N. Waltz, Structural Realism after the Cold War, International Security, 25(1),
(Summer 2000), p. 21. 28
Shakleyina, T.A. & Bogaturov, A.D., op.cit., p. 49.
13
1.2. Neoliberal Institutionalism
Neoliberal institutionalists emphasize the function of institutions which are
commonly defined as “enduring patterns of shared expectations of behavior that
have received some degree of formal assent”.29
In the simplest definition,
institutions are rules and as such, they can shape political behavior. Some
institutions are formal and institutionalized by law, while others are informal such
as cultural norms, but there could be no organized politics without institutions.30
In this sense, politics are structured by institutions because they define who is able
to participate in the particular political arena, shape concerned actors and political
strategies, and furthermore, influence what these actors believe to be both
desirable and possible.31
Robert Keohane, the scholar most closely identified with
neoliberal institutionalism, describes institutions as “persistent and connected sets
of rules (formal or informal) that prescribe behavioral roles, constrain activity, and
shape expectations”32
. Institutionalists therefore see institutions as structures
providing incentives and constraints for actors to battle over interests, ideas and
power.33
Unlike other theories within the liberal approach of IR, neoliberal
institutionalism claims that the role of states is crucial. They design institutions in
order to advance their joint interests which are already defined outside the
institutional context.34
Institutions are therefore created and survive essentially
because they first and foremost serve to maximize the defined interests of their
members.35
This is almost the same view shared by neorealists and it is therefore
not surprising to find that the theories have been called „step-sibblings‟. Keohane
for example argues that
Institutionalism accepts the assumptions of realism about state motivation
and lack of common enforcement power in world politics, but argues that
29
Robert Jervis, op.cit., p. 53. 30
Sven Steinmo, “The New Institutionalism”, in Paul Barry Clark and Joe Foweraker (eds.) The
Encyclopedia of Democratic Thought, (London: Routledge, 2001). 31
ibid. 32
Robert O. Keohane, International Institutions: Two Approaches, International Studies
Quarterly, 32(4), (1988), p. 383. 33
Sven Steinmo, op. cit. 34
Cornelia Navari, “Liberalism”, in Paul D. Williams (ed.) Security Studies: An Introduction,
(London & New York: Routledge, 2008), p. 40. 35
ibid.
14
where common interests exist, realism is too pessimistic about the prospects
for cooperation and the role of institutions.36
Neoliberalist theory thus differs from the neorealist one insofar as it argues that
states cooperate in order to maximize absolute gains; they work towards common
goals when they share similar interests. Neoliberals also declare that institutions
may become so beneficial to the member states - even if and when they have lost
their original purpose - that states prefer to remain members of already established
institutions, instead of constructing or entering new ones.37
1.2.1. Cooperation and Institutions in a Neoliberal Institutionalist
World
The structure of world politics is characterized by anarchy, but neoliberal
institutionalists claim that institutions can alter the character of the international
environment when the thinking and behaviour of states are influenced by their
membership of an institution. Robert Axelrod, who has played a leading role in
theorizing neoliberal institutionalism, posed the question in 1984 of “under what
conditions will cooperation emerge in a world of egoists without central
authority?”38
In his influential work The Evolution of Cooperation, Axelrod tried
to answer this question and argued that when actors traded good for good, or tit
for tat, it initiated a potential for cooperative behavior.39
When such practice was
repeated, egoistic actors would start to trust each other, above all when their
interests were met.40
Axelrod also defined the „shadow of the future‟; declaring
that once cooperation is institutionalized, states hesitate to abandon it, fearing the
uncertainty of what would lay ahead.41
Another line of reasoning behind neoliberal institutionalism is that states
decide to cooperate through institutions in order to lower transaction costs,
facilitate information sharing and improve member states‟ security. When the
36
Robert Keohane, “Institutionalist Theory and the Realist Challenge After the Cold War”, in
Baldwin, Neorealism and Neoinstitutionalism, New York: Columbia University Press, 1993, p.
277. 37
Robert B. McCalla, NATO‟s Persistence after the Cold War, International Organization, 50(3),
(1996), p. 462. 38
In his central contribution to the theory, The Evolution of Cooperation, New York: Basic Books,
1984. His work is cited in Cornelia Navari, “Liberalism”, in Paul D. Williams (ed.) Security
Studies: An Introduction, London, (New York: Routledge, 2008), p. 39. 39
ibid. 40
ibid. 41
ibid.
15
CSTO‟s and NATO‟s working methods are looked at, one can already put a
question mark over their decision-making efficiency as both rely on consensus
between member states. This can prove to be difficult and time-consuming, which
leads to higher transaction costs and even diminution of the organizations‟
credibility if decisions on action are blocked by some member states.
Overall, therefore, neoliberals place high trust in institutions and see them
as drivers of “changing states‟ motives from self-interest to altruism, instilling
confidence in benign shifts in motives, or eliminating anarchy by granting
tremendous control to an international authority”.42
Neoliberal institutionalism
claims that “multilateral institutions are crucial to managing the complex world
that states now confront. Issues ranging from the environment to international
terrorism demand multilateral cooperation”43
. Thus, many neoliberal
institutionalists claim that international agents should promote institutionalization
in order to strengthen the collective interest in global stability. Such a claim gives
a logical explanation to the CSTO‟s wishes for closer cooperation with other
international organizations, such as NATO. An explanation for the latter‟s
reluctance about establishing such ties is to be found elsewhere, however.
1.3. Social Constructivism
Social constructivism is another theoretical perspective that provides some
interesting analyses in the field of international relations. It is not a fully fledged
IR theory, or as Ruggie points out, it can be seen more as a philosophically and
theoretically informed perspective on and approach to the empirical study of
international relations.44
Social constructivism builds on key concepts such as
identity, culture and norms. It has three basic ontological positions as posited by
Christine Agius: First, normative and ideational structures are given great
importance, more than material ones, and thus ideas are of central importance.
Second, identities matter as they give us interests. An actor cannot act without an
identity and identity can explain the action of the actor. Identity is therefore
fundamental to constructivists as the basis of interests; it is not given, but
42
Charles L. Glaser, Realists as Optimists: Cooperation as Self-Help, International Security,
19(3), (Winter 1994-1995), p. 84. 43
Sean Kay, “Neoliberalism: Institutions at War”, in Jennifer Sterling-Folker (ed) Making Sense of
Internationals Relations Theory, (Boulder, London: Lynne Rienner, 2006), p. 74. 44
John Gerard Ruggie, What Makes the World Hang Together? “Neo-utilitarianism and the Social
Constructivist Challenge”, International Organization, 52(4), (Autumn 1998), p. 856.
16
constituted through action. Third, agents and structures are mutually constituted.
This is to say that states, as actors, affect the world, but are at the same time
affected by the world. International politics are therefore not independent from us,
they exist in a world that we affect and this is why different understandings of
security may be possible.45
Key analysts within this school are Alexander Wendt and Iver Neumann.46
Wendt‟s central argument is that identities are not given but constructed and they
endure or are transformed through interaction between different actors.47
Or as he
stated in 1992, “a world in which identities and interests are learned and sustained
by intersubjectively grounded practice, by what states think and do, is one in
which “anarchy is what states make of it””.48
Thus, even though the international
structure is characterized by anarchy, social constructivists argue that the world
system is still governed by rules which are produced and maintained by human
practices.49
These rules, “and not some unchangeable truths deduced from human
nature or from international anarchy, give meaning to international practices”50
.
Social constructivists therefore insist on the interdependency between social
structures and agents. They refute individualism and claim that human agents‟
existence depends on the social environment and the “collectively shared systems
of meanings (“culture” in a broad sense)”.51
At the same time, these human agents
can affect their environment by creating, reproducing and changing culture
through daily practices.52
As Karin Fierke points out, “to construct something is
an act which brings into being a subject or object that otherwise would not
45
Christine Agius, ''Social Constructivism'', in Alan, Collins (ed.), Contemporary Security Studies,
2nd edition, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), p. 50-51. 46
Alexander Wendt, Collective Identity Formation and the International State, The American
Political Science Review, 88, (1994), p. 384-96; Neumann, I.B., Self and Other in International
Relations, European Journal of International Relations, 2, (1996), p. 139-74; Neumann, I.B., Uses
of the Other: ‘The East’ in European Identity Formation, (Minneapolis, MN: University of
Minnesota Press, 1999). 47
Alexander Wendt, “Identity and Structural Change in International Politics”, in Yosef Lapid and
Friedrich Kratochwil (eds.) The Return of Culture and Identity in IR Theory (47-64), (Boulder and
London: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1996), p. 48. 48
Alexander Wendt, Levels of Analysis vs. Agents and Structures: Part III, Review of
International Studies, 18(2), 1992, p. 183. 49
Stefano Guzzini, A Reconstruction of Constructivism in International Relations, European
Journal of International Relations, 6(2), 2000, p. 155. 50
ibid. 51
Thomas Risse, “Let‟s Argue!”: Communicative Action in World Politics, International
Organization, 54(1), Winter 2000, p. 5. 52
ibid.
17
exist”53
. Or in other words, the social context gives meaning to material structures
which are only defined by the interpretation of individuals. This is central to
social constructivism.
Another key concept within social constructivism is the idea of norms
which are vital to identity formation. Such norms can be defined as “collective
expectations about proper behaviour for a given identity”54
. Their effects therefore
penetrate into actors‟ identities and interests instead of only regulating their
behavior and as a result, norms are no longer a superstructure on a material base;
rather, they help to create and define that base.55
Actors frequently adhere to
norms that have thoroughly been integrated in their attitudes and beliefs, leading
them to be “taken for granted”.56
Checkel also points out that there is a model of
human and state behaviour where rule-governed action and logics of
appropriateness prevail in many constructivist accounts. Under such logics, which
are not about ends and means and involve reasoning by analogy and metaphor,
actors will wonder about the situation they find themselves in and how to react to
it, with norms helping them to find an answer. Therefore, norms constitute states
or agents and provide them with understandings of their interests.57
Neumann emphasises the „uses of the other‟, which are representations
individuals make of others, often stereotypical, in order to develop their own
identity.58
As Neumann puts it:
The use of „the East‟ as the other is a general practice in European identity
formation. „The East‟ is indeed Europe‟s other, and it is continuously being
recycled in order to represent European identities. Since the „Eastern
absence‟ is a defining trait of „European‟ identities, there is no use talking
about the end of an East/West divide in European history after the end of the
Cold War. The question is not whether the East will be used in the forging of
new European identities but how this is being done.59
53
Karin Fierke, Critical Approaches to International Security, (Oxford: Polity Press, 2007), p. 56. 54
Jepperson, R., Wendt, A. & Katzenstein, P.J., "Norms, Identity, and Culture in National
Security", in Peter J. Katzenstein (ed.) The Culture of National Security, (New York: Columbia
University Press, 1996), p. 54. 55
Jeffrey T. Checkel, The Constructivist Turn in International Relations Theory, World Politics,
50(2), (January 1998), p. 328. 56
Thomas Risse, op.cit., p. 6. 57
Jeffrey T. Checkel, op.cit., p. 326. 58
Iver B. Neumann, op.cit., (1999), p. 77. 59
Iver B. Neumann, op.cit., (1999), p. 207.
18
Furthermore, it is relatively easy to see that the willingness of states to engage in
collective security practices hinges on where states fall on the spectrum from
positive to negative identification with other states.60
What is crucial in this
context is that conceptions of self and other, and consequently security interests,
develop only in interaction.61
1.3.1. Cooperation and Institutions in a Social Constructivist World
Social constructivism has not paid much attention to security issues, but the main
shared assumption between constructivists about security is that it is a social
construction.62
What social constructivism adds to the analysis of the CSTO and
NATO interactions is the vision of how culture and identities are shaped and
viewed by different actors. In this regard, it will be interesting to find out whether
NATO‟s disinclination for multilateral cooperation with the CSTO is explained by
concrete, „realist‟, security-related motives, or whether it rests on
socially/culturally constructed Western assumptions about the CSTO‟s nature and
values, which may or may not be objectively justified. Here it will be interesting
to investigate through the lens of social constructivism how Russia‟s foreign
policy is viewed by the West, and to highlight some western analyses that
regularly present it “as puzzling, unpredictable and divergent from the western
norm”63
. Conversely, social constructivism may be used to get a more thorough
understanding of Russia‟s vision of NATO‟s change of role after the end of the
Cold War and its enlargement that ensued.
NATO as an organization has a long history of cooperation and interaction
of states which are like-minded with shared values. Anne Clunan points out that
states form their security identity through a process of reiterated interaction
with other states [...] a long process of friendly interaction may lead states to
not only identify each other as allies and friends, but to view their security
60
Maja Zehfuss, “Constructivism and Identity: A Dangerous Liason”, European Journal of
International Relations, 7, (2001), p. 318. 61
Alexander Wendt, Anarchy is What States Make of It: The Social Construction of Power
Politics, International Organization, 46(2), 1992, p. 401. 62
Matt McDonald, “Social Constructivism”, in Paul D. Williams (ed.) Security Studies: An
Introduction (59-72), (London, New York: Routledge, 2008), p. 61. 63
Brown, J.D.J., A Stereotype, Wrapped in a Cliché, Inside a Caricature: Russian Foreign Policy
and Orientalism, Politics, 30(3), 2010, p. 154.
19
interests as intertwined and consequently to identify with each other as
belonging to the same community.64
From a social constructivist perspective, we can thus hypothesize two obvious
problems of identity which may hinder cooperation between the CSTO and
NATO: firstly that European and NATO identity is in part constructed by viewing
Russia and its partners in the CSTO as „the others‟ and vice versa; and secondly
that the process of interaction between these particular entities has been relatively
short and has not of yet been able to lead to friendly identification or the
intertwining of security interests.
64
Anne L. Clunan, “Constructing Concepts of Identity: Prospects and Pitfalls of a Sociological
Approach to World Politics”, in Rudra Sil & Eileen M. Doherty (eds.) Beyond Bounderies?:
Disciplines, Paradigms, and Theoretical Integration in International Studies, NY: State University
of New York Press, (2000). p. 90.
20
II. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
2.1. Brief historical background
World War II ended thanks to the joint interventions of the armed forces of both
the US and the USSR in Europe. The collaboration between the two powers,
however, did not continue on similar terms once Germany was defeated. The US
and several western European states began to feel threatened by Stalin‟s strategy
for expanding the Soviet Union‟s control notably over Central and Eastern
Europe. The Soviet intelligence had also been spying on the US in order to collect
several reports about “the Manhattan Project” which was a US-UK collaborative
project to construct the first atomic bomb launched in 1939.65
In fact, the Soviet
Union had already been working on its own nuclear arms program since 1943 and
by the end of 1946 both the United States and the Soviet Union had developed
and tested their atomic bombs.66
It was soon clear after the World War II that a
nuclear arms race between the two states was starting as neither wanted to get rid
of its atomic weapons programs and both continued to secretly build up their
nuclear arsenal.
Fearing the onset of another war and a more dangerous one this time, the
foreign ministers of twelve North American and European countries decided to
build a system of collective defence leading to the signing of the founding
documents of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) in Washington in
65
The work remained highly secret as it was feared Germany already was working on a similar
project and if it would be first to develop such powerful weapon, it would have its tool to destroy
its enemies and consequently dominate the world. 66
Olav Njølstad, The Development and Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, Nobelprize.org,
http://www.nobelprize.org/educational/peace/nuclear_weapons/readmore.html, accessed 31
August 2011.
21
April 1949.67
The original treaty on which the alliance relies stipulates that its
Member States:
[A]re determined to safeguard the freedom, common heritage and
civilisation of their peoples, founded on the principles of democracy,
individual liberty and the rule of law. They seek to promote stability and
well-being in the North Atlantic area.68
Stalin did not remain passive in the face of these initiatives by the Western
allies. In response to the creation of NATO and later integration of the Federal
Republic of Germany into the organization (in 1954), the Soviet Union in 1955
orchestrated the signature of the Warsaw Pact with seven other communist states
leading to the creation of a mutual-defence organization which was to act as a
counterpart to NATO.69
This meant that during the Cold War, Europe was divided
by these two blocs; one led by the United States proclaiming its support for
democracy and the other led by the Soviet Union praising communism. Germany
was literally split up in the middle with the western part being allied with NATO
while the eastern side allied with the Warsaw Pact.
2.1.1. The End of the Cold War and Transformation of NATO’s Role
In the late 1980s the Cold War was coming to an end, most clearly marked by the
symbolic fall of the Berlin wall in 1989. Soon after, the former East Germany
withdrew from the Warsaw Pact. With the gradual dissolution of the Soviet Union
from 1985 to 1991 followed by the secession of member states from the Warsaw
Treaty Organization, the Cold War geopolitical architecture that had lasted over
four decades had finally collapsed.70
The threat which NATO had originally been
founded to oppose had disappeared. NATO did not vanish, however, as some had
expected, but its role was going to change significantly in the following years.
67
60 years of NATO: 1949 – 1989, Deutsche Welle, April 3, 2009, http://www.dw-
world.de/dw/article/0,,4144009,00.html, accessed May 8, 2010. 68
The North Atlantic Treaty, April 4, 1949, n.p., http://www.nato.int/nato-
welcome/pdf/nato_treaty_en_light.pdf, accessed May 8, 2010. 69
“Warsaw Pact”, in Encyclopædia Britannica, 2010. Accessed May 13, 2010. Available from:
Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/636142/Warsaw-
Pact 70
Otto Pick, The Demise of the Warsaw Pact, Nato Review [Web Edition], 2, n.p., April 1991,
http://www.deutsche-aussenpolitik.de/resources/seminars/gb/euracowa/document/9102-3.html,
accessed May 8, 2010.
22
NATO needed to redefine its purpose and began to adapt itself to a changed post-
Cold War security environment.
The alliance was used soon after the end of the Cold War as a political
club, celebrating and consolidating the democratization of the European
Continent.71
Media and diplomatic messages were crafted to promote the message
of the changing role of NATO, while themes emphasizing realism and balance of
power, the hallmarks of the Cold War, were avoided.72
In their place, ideas of
liberalism and cooperation with “partners for peace” were promoted.73
Many
former states of the Soviet Union wanted to liberate themselves from their former
ties with Russia and join the free Europe. The idea of expanding NATO was
therefore soon brought to the table. Russia that was amongst the enthusiastic after
the end of the Cold War was never keen on NATO‟s expansion initiative as it was
seen as undermining Russia‟s own security.
Major crises were also to break out in the 1990s that revealed the necessity of
maintaining the transatlantic partnership. The breakup of Yugoslavia coupled with
the resulting ethnic wars demonstrated the need for NATO to take the lead in
stabilizing the situation, as the European Union was not built to deal with hard
security issues and the United Nations had failed to independently solve the
crisis.74
NATO, therefore, took upon itself to bring order to the Balkans which led
to military actions in Bosnia in 1995 and in Kosovo in 1999.75
Russia was
opposed to both of these interventions and in the case of Kosovo the UN Security
Council had not sanctioned the NATO intervention which enraged Russian
authorities.76
Thus, the relationship between Russia and NATO came under
significant strain quite quickly.
71
Betts, R.K., The Three Faces of NATO, The National Interest online, n.p., October 2009,
http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id=20944, accessed May 13, 2010. 72
Delatte, P.M., The Transformation of the Transatlantic Alliance and the War On Terror, Air
War College, Air University, February 2008, p. 7. 73
ibid. 74
Brzezinski, Z., An Agenda for NATO, Foreign Affairs, 88, (September/October 2009), p. 9. 75
Karns, M.P. & Mingst, K.A., “Regional Organizations”, in International Organizations: The
Politics and Processes of Global Governance, Colorado & London: Lynne Rienner, 2004, p. 156. 76
ibid.
23
2.2. NATO’s Eastern Policy
During the Rome Summit in November 1991, NATO adopted a new Strategic
Concept that outlined a “broad approach to security based on dialogue,
cooperation and maintanance of collective defence capability”.77
That same year,
NATO created the North Atlantic Cooperation Council (NACC) as an institution
for political dialogue, consultation and cooperation on issues of common concern
in an attempt to develop a new relationship with Central and Eastern European
countries.78
NACC focused on multilateral dialogue, but NATO wanted each
country to be able to develop individual cooperative relations within the
organization. This was seen as essential in supporting the Partnership for Peace
program (PfP) which was created in 1994.79
Then, in 1997, the Euro-Atlantic
Partnership Council (EAPC) was established to replace the NACC and this
organization continues in existence to this day. While it was built on the
achievements of its predecessor, it furthermore paved the way for the
development of an enhanced and more operational partnership where countries
could collectively as well as individually pursue a dialogue with NATO.80
Russia
actively took part in the process, but it was not seen as sufficient. Russia therefore
continued to ask for more specific ties with NATO.
2.2.1. The Partnership for Peace
The Partnership for Peace (PfP) programme was established by NATO in 1994 by
twenty-four countries from Eastern Europe and Central Asia which had formerly
been under the sway of the Soviet Union.81
It took Russia a year to join as it was
pessimistic about NATO‟s intentions. NATO with its then sixteen members was
faced with new security issues and needed cooperation with other countries to be
better equipped to handle them. The organization saw the Partnership for Peace as
a prime way of assuring that such cooperation could go forward. With the PfP,
77
NATO Handbook, [Web 50th Anniversary edition], Brussels: NATO Office of Information and
Press, 1998, p. 27, http://www.nato.int/docu/handbook/1998/index.htm, accessed November 18,
2009. 78
“The Transformation of the Alliance”, in NATO Handbook [Web Edition], Brussels: NATO
Office of Information and Press, 2001, p. 40,
http://www.nato.int/docu/handbook/2001/pdf/handbook.pdf, accessed November 18, 2009. 79
ibid. 80
“The Transformation of the Alliance”, in NATO Handbook [Web Edition], op.cit., p. 41. 81
Karns, M.P. & Mingst, K.A., “Regional Organizations”, op.cit., p. 156.
24
military cooperation was increased between the alliance and former Warsaw Pact
members, without NATO having to commit to mutual defence in case these
partners were attacked as that only applied to full member countries of NATO.82
Another idea behind the PfP was to grant states that wanted to join NATO an
opportunity to prove themselves worthy of formal membership negotiations.
Thus, participating states were to be groomed for future membership to the
alliance.
Russia, however, stated that before joining the PfP that “it would regard
full membership in the alliance by Eastern European countries as a threat to its
own security”.83
Russia also claimed that NATO had promised earlier in 1990 that
it would not expand its Alliance.84
NATO on its part never admitted to having
made such a promise however. Russia claimed a “special status” within the PfP
based on its geographical size relative to other participating states and because of
its possession of nuclear arms.85
NATO did not want to grant Russia a special
treatment within the program as it would have been badly viewed by other partner
countries, but was open to making a kind of side agreement.86
It was not until
May 1995, however, that first steps towards a special relationship between the two
were taken when NATO made an attractive offer to Russia based on a bilateral
contract to encourage it to join the PfP.87
Initially, the relationship improved steadily and Russia‟s cooperation with
NATO during the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1996 was seen as effective.
Russia‟s contribution was the largest non-NATO contingent in these
interventions, proving its de-facto supremacy over other members of the PfP.88
82
William E. Schmidt, Russia Tells NATO It Is Ready to Join Peace Partnership, The New York
Times [Web Edition], May 25, 1994, http://www.nytimes.com/1994/05/25/world/russia-tells-nato-
it-is-ready-to-join-peace-partnership.html, accessed May 8, 2010. 83
ibid. 84
Dannreuter, R. Escaping the Enlargement Trap in NATO-Russian Relations, Survival, 41(4),
Winter 1999-2000, p. 151. 85
William E. Schmidt, op.cit, n.p. 86
William E. Schmidt, op.cit, n.p. 87
Zwack, P.B., A NATO-Russia Contingency Command, Parameters, Spring 2004, p. 95,
http://www.carlisle.army.mil/usawc/parameters/Articles/04spring/zwack.pdf, accessed May 13,
2010. 88
Hendrickson, G.B., The Future of NATO-Russian Relations: Or, How to Dance with a Bear and
Not Get Mauled, Washington, D.C.: The Atlantic Council of the United States, 2005, p. 3,
25
2.2.2. The Founding Act and the Permanent Joint Council
At the Madrid Summit in July 1997, NATO invited the Czech Republic, Hungary
and Poland to begin accession talks with the alliance.89
NATO leaders knew that
this would be a very sensitive issue for Russia, especially as expansion talks were
for the first time formally being held with former members of the Warsaw Pact;
and Russia had already made it clear that it would view NATO‟s expansion
towards its borders as a threat to its own national security. To soothe Russia‟s
fears, NATO decided to develop a more structured framework of cooperation and
therefore the Founding Act on Mutual Relations, Cooperation and Security was
proposed.90
This, in turn, led to the creation of the NATO-Russia Permanent Joint
Council (PJC) in 1998.91
Russia was thereby granted a seat at the same table as
other permanent members of the alliance and regular consultations on common
security issues began to take place.92
The member nations would, however, meet
before every meeting to coordinate their positions on particular issues and only
include Russia in any talks once a consensus had been reached.93
Though these taken steps were supposed to determine Russia‟s importance
to NATO, mistrust still seemed to remain. This was made especially visible when
in 1999 NATO admitted the three new member states to the alliance which Russia
had difficulties with. The same year NATO also decided to initiate air strikes in
Kosovo, against Russia‟s will and without formal support from the UN Security
Council, leading to Russia‟s withdrawal from the PJC. At the end of the year, with
the arrival of new Secretary-General Lord Robertson, a renewal of discussions
with Russia was emphasized as a priority.94
Additionally, the election of Vladimir
Putin as president of Russia in the year 2000 led to a rebuilding of former
relations with NATO.95
http://www.acus.org/files/publication_pdfs/82/0512-
Future_NATO_Russian_Relations_Gordon_Hendrickson.pdf, accessed May 8, 2010. 89
ibid. 90
Hendrickson, G.B., op.cit., p. 4. 91
Cottey, A., “Russia: Partner or Problem in European Security?”, in Security in the New Europe,
Hampshire & New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007, p. 109. 92
Hendrickson, G.B., op.cit., p. 4. 93
ibid. 94
Hendrickson, G.B., op.cit., p. 5. 95
NATO-Russia: Forging Deeper Relations, Brussels: NATO Public Diplomacy Division, 2004, p.
7, http://www.nato.int/docu/nato-russia/nato-russia-e.pdf, accessed May 8, 2010.
26
2.2.3. The NATO-Russia Council (NRC)
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 marked a turning point for NATO‟s
mission in the world. For the first time since its inception, article 5 of the
Washington treaty was invoked (to permit Allied support for the USA), and
NATO was soon – in mid-2002 - to adopt a policy document authorizing itself for
the first time to launch defence missions outside the Euro-Atlantic territory. This
would also be the moment for deepening relations with Russia. Showing its
commitment and sympathy to the United States, the then president of Russia,
Vladimir Putin, was the first foreign leader to call the White House to offer
assistance after the attacks. It was clear for both states at that point that
cooperation was essential in order to be able to face new security issues. As
NATO‟s Secretary-General Lord Robertson declared at the time:
[W]hat was lacking from the earlier NATO-Russia dialogue was a true sense
of shared purpose and urgency. The events of 11 September provided that
impetus – a stark reminder of the need for comprehensive and coordinated
action to respond to common threats.96
In 2002, the PJC was therefore replaced by a new NATO-Russia Council (NRC)
which meant that regular military and political discussions between NATO and
Russia were to take place.97
This time, however, NATO declared that Russia and
the alliance would work as “equal partners in areas of common interest”.98
To
formalize this, an ambitious plan was laid out for the NRC at a formal summit in
2002 and according to the Rome Declaration which followed:
NATO member states and Russia will continue to intensify their cooperation
in areas including the struggle against terrorism, crisis management, non-
proliferation, arms control and confidence-building measures, theater missile
defense, search and rescue at sea, military-to-military cooperation, and civil
emergencies.99
96
Robertson, G.L., “Introduction”, in NATO-Russia Council: Rome Summit 2002, Brussels,
Belgium: NATO Office of Information and Press, 2002, p. 5,
http://www.nato.int/docu/comm/2002/0205-rome/rome-eng.pdf, accessed May 13, 2010. 97
ibid. 98
NATO-Russia Council: Rome Summit 2002, op.cit., p. 10. 99
NATO-Russia Council: Rome Summit 2002, op.cit., p. 12. See also “NATO-Russia Council”,
NATO Issues, 30 August 2004, n.p., http://www.nato.int/issues/nrc/index.html, accessed May 14
2010.
27
It was also important for both parties to make the NRC more open and transparent
than the previous PJC. Russia was now included on equal basis with the member
states of the alliance, instead of the Allies meeting first before sitting down with
Russian representatives.100
Thus, Russia seemed to finally be granted a valuable
place within NATO‟s structure by this arrangement.
2.2.4. NATO’s expansion perceived as a threat by Russia
The Russian government was pleased with such an evolution but it did not change
the perception of NATO‟s future enlargement being a threat. Russia felt
threatened by NATO‟s expansion because many of the candidate countries were
specifically asking to join NATO on the grounds of their need for protection
against their powerful neighbor Russia.101
This is one of the main reasons Russian
authorities have always suspected NATO‟s motives for expanding eastwards,
thinking that maybe the organization was plotting to build up an offensive system
intended to deter Russia. After centuries of invasions from the West (from the
French, Poles and Germans for example – who all are NATO members now),
Russians still seem to perceive a possibility of that happening again, and have
tended to analyze NATO‟s actions from such a viewpoint.102
At the time, Russia
stated that it would only find another round of enlargement of the alliance
acceptable if NATO “transformed itself to a political organization”.103
Unsurprisingly, such demands fell upon deaf ears. Russia therefore showed at the
time its determination to consolidate its own security architecture which in 2003
led to the institutionalization of the Collective Security Treaty which had been in
effect under the auspices of the Commonwealth of Independent States.
100
Hendrickson, G.B., op.cit., p. 7. 101
Boyer, Y. & Vilboux, N., Vision américaine de l´OTAN, Recherches & Documents:
Observatoire de la stratégie américaine, Paris: la Fondation pour la Recherche Stratégique, 2010,
p. 18, http://www.frstrategie.org/barreFRS/publications/rd/2010/RD_201001.pdf, accessed May 10
2010. 102
Hendrickson, G.B., op.cit., p. 27. 103
Smith, J., “The NATO-Russia Relationship: Defining Moment or Déjà vu?”, in Europe, Russia,
and the United States: Finding a New Balance, Washington, D.C.: Center for Strategic &
International Studies, November 2008, p. 8,
http://csis.org/files/media/csis/pubs/081110_smith_natorussia_web.pdf, accessed May 10 2010.
28
In March 2004 seven new members entered NATO, including the three
Baltic states.104
NATO immediately started F-16 air patrols over Baltic territory,
infuriating the Russian authorities.105
Proceedings in the NRC came to a halt
whereby no progress could be made on a common agenda or in producing
concrete policy changes and eventually, both parties began to blame each other for
the council‟s diminishing returns.106
More mutual accusations were made in the
following years and reached a peak in 2007, when the United States began formal
talks with the Czech Republic and Poland on placing bases there as part of its new
missile defence system. This was to become a huge issue that is yet to be settled
but has moved forward with Obama‟s radical redrafting of the project in Autumn
2009, after Russia‟s recurrent statements of the system being seen as a “clear
threat”.107
It was not until Russia‟s presidential election of Dmitry Medvedev in
the Summer of 2008 that optimism seemed to resurface. He was willing to „re-set‟
Russia‟s relationship with the West; but Russia then entered into conflict with
Georgia on August 7, 2008, freezing relations again.
2.2.5. Recent developments in NATO/US relations with Russia
On March 5, 2009 NATO‟s Foreign Ministers decided to resume the dialogue
with Russia through the NRC.108
The reason for the decision was the belief in the
alliance that Russia was needed as a cooperating partner on issues of common
interest, “such as Afghanistan, counterterrorism, drugs trafficking, non-
proliferation, arms control and the new threat of piracy”.109
Finally on June 27,
nearly a year after NRC‟s suspension resulting from the Georgian War, Sergey
Lavrov attended a NRC meeting at which parties decided to restart military
cooperation.110
The US and NATO took significant further steps to improve relations with
Russia from summer 2009 onwards. Firstly, on September 17, the new US
104
Smith, J., op.cit., p. 8-9. 105
Smith, J., op.cit., p. 9. 106
Smith, J., op.cit., p. 9-10. 107
Smith, J., op.cit., p. 11. 108
De Haas, M., NATO-Russia Relations after the Georgian Conflict, Atlantisch Perspectief,
33(7), November 2009, p. 6. 109
ibid. 110
ibid.
29
President Barack Obama decided to abandon the plan for deploying missile bases
in Poland and the Czech Republic, in favour of greater reliance on sea-based
missiles and bases closer to the supposed target, Iran.111
Secondly, the next day,
NATO‟s newly appointed Secretary-General, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, held his
first public speech and dedicated it to a new beginning in the relationship with
Russia.112
These two policy initiatives were considered as a positive step forward
in Western-Russian relations, essentially since Moscow responded to them in a
constructive way.113
That did not mean however that all issues had been resolved,
but it definitely characterized a genuine breakthrough and again emphasized the
importance of strong partnership with Russia.
Although there have been positive developments recently between Russia
and NATO, many thorny issues still divide them and will remain contentious. One
of the most salient issues is Obama‟s Ballistic Missile Defense (BMD) plan.
Russia does not have a united response to the proposals, as was highlighted
recently by the visit by Dmitry Rogozin, Special Envoy of the Russian President
for Missile-Defense Cooperation with NATO, to the US State Department. Both
Russia‟s foreign and defense ministries have been active in the BMD dialogue, yet
put forth competing perspectives on the issue. Rogozin himself also seems to be
following his own agenda. The uncertainty of who will become the next Russian
president furthermore inhibits Russian bureaucrats from putting forth any bold
initiatives.114
The ever-present lack of trust is also a major stepping stone, as many
Russians believe, for reasons of pride and history, that the US‟s claim that the
BMD is aimed at protecting America and its allies against a potential strike from
Iran is false. Instead it is believed that the US is seeking BMD capabilities that
can negate Russia‟s strategic deterrent.115
There are also economic concerns:
111
U.S. Dramatically Alters Plans for European Missile Defense, RFE/RL, September 17, 2009,
http://www.rferl.org/content/Report_US_To_Abandon_European_Missile_Defense_Plans/182464
7.html, accessed May 13, 2010. 112
NATO and Russia: A New Beginning, NATO, September 18, 2009,
http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/opinions_57640.htm, accessed May 13, 2010. 113
De Haas, M., op.cit., p. 8. 114
Richard Weitz, Getting to „Yes‟ on Missile Defense, Project Syndicate, 17 August 2011,
http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/weitz9/English, accessed 8 September 2011. 115
ibid.
30
Russia would much rather see a pan-European BMD system where they would
provide expertise and technology rather than building their own system.116
Among other issues that still divide Russia and the US and NATO is
Russia‟s continuing refusal to recognize Kosovo‟s independence and its full
support of Serbia‟s stance on the matter. Russia also opposes NATO‟s open door
policy towards Georgia and Ukraine and has instead tried to push its idea of a new
European Security Treaty.117
As for NATO, it is obviously still concerned with
Russian occupation of Georgian territory (Abkhasia and Ossetia) as well as
Russia‟s decision to suspend participation in the Treaty on Conventional Forces in
Europe (CFE).118
In addition, there are continued concerns about democracy and
the rule of law.
2.3. Strengths and weaknesses
The world‟s security structure since the end of the Cold War has dramatically
changed but NATO is still in place. Asking how NATO managed to stay relevant
more than two decades after it lost most of its original purpose is thus an obvious
point for starting to understand the alliance‟s strengths and weaknesses. The main
IR theories have attempted explanations of NATO‟s persistence which might
unveil interesting analyses of the real purpose of the alliance.
Neorealists had predicted the dissolution of NATO once the Cold War
ended, as alliances form because of an external threat. Since the Soviet Union had
collapsed, it was only a question of time until NATO would lose its significance
and eventually dissolve. This neorealist prediction, made for example by Kenneth
N. Waltz and John Mearsheimer, was however proved false by events.119
Waltz
has therefore argued that institutions like NATO are first of all treaties made by
states and states determine their fate.120
Neorealists have claimed, ever since it
was clear NATO would not disappear, that this reflected not a realist failure of
understanding international politics, but instead an underestimation of US‟s aims
116
Nikolas K. Gvosdev, Countdown Begins on NATO-Russia BMD Deal, America-Russia Net, 11
July 2011, http://www.america-russia.net/eng/security/280862885, accessed 8 September 2011. 117
Russia Unveils Proposal for European Security Treaty, RFE/RL, 30 November 2009.
http://www.rferl.org/content/Russia_Unveils_Proposal_For_European_Security_Treaty/1891161.h
tml, accessed 8 September 2011. 118
ibid. 119
Robert B. McCalla, op.cit., p. 469-470. 120
Kenneth N. Waltz, (2000), op.cit., p. 20.
31
and influence in foreign relations. That NATO remained, illustrated “not the
defects but the limitations of structural explanations. [As] structures shape and
shove; they do not determine the actions of states”.121
Realists, according to
Waltz, instead suggest that NATO‟s durability and enlargement after the end of
the Cold War was mainly a power-driven decision of the United States, the
strongest member within the alliance.122
Neoliberal institutionalists also attempted an explanation of NATO‟s
survival and expansion after the end of the Cold War by claiming that institutions,
once created, “may take on something of a life of their own; they may begin to act
with a measure of autonomy, becoming less dependent on the wills of their
sponsors and members. NATO supposedly validates these thoughts”123
. Its high
degree of institutionalization is one of the reasons it persisted long after the threat
it was constructed against had disappeared. NATO must have developed
something more than only a mechanism trying to deter the Soviet Union. As
Celeste A. Wallander puts it “[a]nalyses defining NATO as an alliance for coping
with the Soviet threat are not incorrect, but they are incomplete”.124
Thus, in
addition to trying to deter the Soviet Union during the Cold War, the alliance was
intended to build a peaceful and secure region encompassing members as
democratic states.125
NATO was built on an Article IV, promoting peace and
security, as well as an article V creating collective defence.126
NATO thus
constructed itself during a time of opposing a threat but took the time to also
promote trust, cooperation and stability in security relations between its
members.127
Hence, once the threat disappeared, the institutionalized networking
that had slowly but steadily been put in place was not to be erased that easily.
For social constructivists, what determined the continuation of NATO was
the strong sense among member states of a collective identity that had been in the
shaping since its creation. Constructivists state that identities stem from states‟
“interactions with different social environments, both domestic and international”
121
ibid. 122
Kenneth N. Waltz, (2000), op.cit., p. 25. 123
Kenneth N. Waltz, (2000), p. 19. 124
Celeste A. Wallander, Institutional Assets and Adaptability: NATO After the Cold War,
International Organization, 54(4), (Autumn 2000), p. 716. 125
Celeste A. Wallander, op.cit., p. 713. 126
ibid. 127
Celeste A. Wallander, op.cit., p. 716.
32
which shape the interaction between states.128
With its longevity NATO has been
able to create shared values and a sense of common identity between member
states, resulting essentially from interactions between members within the
organization. The disappearance of the military institution would have also led to
the member states losing an important framework linking them with each other,
and they were simply not willing for that to happen.
NATO has its headquarters in Belgium with a staff of roughly 4 000
people which provides a framework of consultation and coordination between
member states.129
It also has an allied command mechanism that coordinates its
military operations, which allows member states to achieve their goals
efficiently.130
NATO today has around “150 000 soldiers, sailors and airmen on
three continents in active operations – engaged in Afghanistan, Libya, Iraq, the
Balkans, piracy, cyber, missile defence – and is still conducting military exercises
and training to maintain collective defence”.131
The organization has also proven
to be able to adapt itself to new challenges and has shown to be effective in cases
of emergency, the events of 9/11 proving to be the best example to prove this. It
took NATO only a few hours after two meetings of the Permanent
Representatives to invoke Article V for the first time in its history.132
These facts
therefore clearly demonstrate NATO‟s high level of institutionalization.
To this day, NATO has been considered as the most powerful military and
political organization in the world. Following its latest enlargement in 2009 it
comprises 28 member states from the north-western part of the globe that has so
far maintained its status as the most productive, economically rich, socially
modern, technologically advanced, and politically democratic part of the world.133
The economic power of the region is a fact as its 900 million inhabitants (13
percent of the world‟s population) account for nearly half of the world‟s GDP.134
128
Peter J. Katzenstein (ed.), The Culture of National Security: Norms and Identity in World
Politics, (New York: Colombia University Press, 1996), p. 25. 129
“NATO headquarters”, http://www.nato.int/cps/en/natolive/topics_49284.htm, accessed 5
September 2011. 130
Celeste A. Wallander, NATO‟s Price: Shape Up or Ship Out, Foreign Affairs, 81(6), (2002), p.
3. 131
James Stavridis, “Operation Unified Protector Update”, 11 May 2011,
http://www.aco.nato.int/page76502411.aspx, accessed 2 September 2011. 132
Christian Tuschhoff, Why NATO is Still Relevant, International Politics, 40, (2003), p. 101. 133
Zbigniew Brzezinski, An Agenda for NATO, Foreign Affairs, 88, (September/October 2009),
p. 7. 134
ibid.
33
NATO has combined the United States‟ military and economic power with the
European Allies‟ political and economic strength for over sixty years. Since the
global economic crisis that hit in late 2008, the western economy has been
declining however, making room for other regions in the world to rise. Western
leadership in the economic field seems not to be guaranteed anymore and new
major powers such as China are rising to a global role.
NATO has however been facing several problems since the end of the
Cold War which has weakened its status. After the Cold War, NATO has been
trying to reinvent itself and mainly because of internal disagreements it still seems
unclear where NATO‟s role is heading. The Iraq War in 2003 showed differences
of opinion between member states. The US deliberately chose not to use NATO
for invading Iraq and the alliance members were so divided over the war that
France and Germany adopted a common position on it with Russia.135
The increasing military funding gap between the US and European states
has also been of serious concern and even harmed the transatlantic partnership
during the last decade.136
Kurt Volker, former US Permanent Representative to
NATO, stated recently that “NATO has lost the underlying consensus that holds
its members together. NATO is more divided over fundamentals today than at any
time in its history”.137
In this context he pointed to the negative implications of
disagreements between member states over the organization‟s relationship with
Russia, NATO‟s core tasks, enlargement plans, and overall meaning of collective
defence.138
More recently, Robert M. Gates, US Secretary of Defence, addressed a
gathering at the Security and Defence Agenda (SDA) in Brussels on June 10
2011.139
He highlighted NATO‟s two major weaknesses, notably the lack of
135
Andrew Cottey, “Europe and America: The End of an Era?”, in Security in the New Europe,
Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, p. 64-65. 136
Ivo Daalder, “The End of Atlanticism,” in Tod Lindberg (ed.) Beyond Paradise and Power:
Europe, America and the Future of a Troubled Partnership, (New York: Routledge, 2005), p. 39-
60. 137
Kurt Volker, A New Transatlantic Compact, Atlantic Council, 2010,
http://www.acus.org/publication/new-transatlantic-compact, accessed November 18, 2010. 138
ibid. 139
Robert M. Gates, “Reflections on the status and future of the transatlantic alliance” (policy
speech), Security and Defence Agenda, 10 June 2011,
http://www.securitydefenceagenda.org/Portals/14/Documents/Publications/2011/GATES_Report_
final.pdf, accessed 14 August 2011.
34
military capabilities and a weak political will within the alliance.140
These
shortcomings have been visible in Afghanistan where the US has shouldered the
heaviest burdens, both militarily and financially. Gates talked about how he
perceives the military deficiency of European members of NATO and warned
about a diminishing investment in transatlantic relations because of the economic
crisis and changing political scenery in US domestic politics.141
He pointed out
that only five of the 28 member states, namely the United States, United
Kingdom, France, Greece, and Albania currently spend more than the agreed 2
percent of total GDP on defence.142
In his speech, Gates stressed the fact that the
US bears almost the entire cost of NATO stating that “the US share of NATO
defence spending has now risen to more than 75%”.143
In his view, these statistics
show an unacceptable picture and if NATO is to be called a transatlantic
partnership, it is about time European leaders “realise that the drift of the last 20
years cannot be allowed to continue” and they take concrete actions in sharing the
financial burden in NATO.144
On the flipside of this coin, European NATO members have pointed out
that the US has withdrawn most of its troops from Europe and that Gates criticism
rings hollow as a large segment of the US‟s military budget is for US interests
only, non-European ventures and non-NATO military dimensions.145
Many
European members are frustrated at the accusations of their lack of military
capabilities at the same time as the US is not willing to share military technology
with its allies, as a recent example where Turkey put purchases of military
hardware from the US on hold over US reluctance to share technology illustrates
140
Robert M. Gates, op.cit., p. 4. 141
Robert M. Gates, op.cit., p. 5. 142
The US dedicates 5.4 percent of its GDP on defence, while Greece spends 2.9 percent, Britain
2.7 percent and Albania and France contribute 2% - cf. Financial and Economic Data Relating to
NATO Defence, NATO Public Diplomacy Division, 2011, p. 6,
http://www.nato.int/nato_static/assets/pdf/pdf_2011_03/20110309_PR_CP_2011_027.pdf,
accessed 9 August 2011. 143
Robert M. Gates, op.cit., p. 5 144
Robert M. Gates, op.cit., p. 6. 145
NATO only lists the total military expenditure of each member country and does not have a
breakdown of the share that is dedicated to NATO operations, thus it is not a useful tool to
evaluate real contributions. For military expenditure of each member state for 2010, please see
http://www.nato.int/nato_static/assets/pdf/pdf_2011_03/20110309_PR_CP_2011_027.pdf
35
vividly.146
In addition, European member states were led into risky, costly
operations in Afghanistan and Iraq that have hardly improved European security
as a whole.
Another major area of frustration for European members has been the way
US national interests have informed its handling of Russia, and not NATO
policies, especially during the last decade. A good example is how the Bush
administration pushed hard for the enlargement of NATO to include Georgia and
Ukraine, which was unrealistic and antagonistic towards Russia, and was opposed
by many NATO members, such as Germany, France and Spain.147
Even more
generally, the unilateral tendencies of the first Bush administration, which
devalued existing alliances and rejected all institutional restraints had severe
negative effects on NATO cooperation, as the US was seen to be creating its own
coalitions determined by the mission at hand, rather than using the organizations
in place, or as Rumsfeld famously put it: “[…] the mission determines the
coalition; the coalition must not determine the mission”.148
146
Jorge Benitez, Turkey puts F-35 order on hold over US refusal to share technology,
NATOSource, 24 March 2011, http://www.acus.org/natosource/turkey-puts-f-35-order-hold-over-
us-refusal-share-technology, accessed 8 September 2011. 147
'Old' and 'New' Europe divided at NATO Summit, EurActiv, 2 April 2008,
http://www.euractiv.com/enlargement/old-new-europe-divided-nato-summit/article-171288,
accessed 8 September 2011. 148
Donald Rumsfeld, Keeper of the Flame, Center for Security Policy, 6 November 2001,
http://www.defense.gov/Speeches/Speech.aspx?SpeechID=464, accessed 8 September 2011.
36
III. The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO)
The CSTO comprises, as of today, seven member states: Armenia, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, the Russian Federation, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. The
organization was formally institutionalized in 2003, but the Collective Security
Treaty (CST), on which the institution is based, has been in effect since 1992
under the auspices of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).
Nevertheless, the CSTO is still hardly known in the West. One aim of this chapter
is to draw due attention to the institution. It will start with a brief historical
background and then offer an overview of the CSTO‟s current activities, before
establishing its strengths and weaknesses.
3.1. Brief historical background
There was much initial optimism following the end of the Cold War. The Russian
leadership and its then President, Boris Yeltsin, hoped for European integration
for their country. Ideas of constructing a new world order, embracing former Cold
War enemies, were quickly put forward; but the euphoric spark was to be equally
quickly extinguished. The NATO alliance persisted even though its initial threat
had disappeared, and there was no will on its part for integrating Russia into its
coalition framework. This is one of the reasons why the Russian Federation
quickly started to reanimate existing military structures that were put in place
under the Warsaw Pact.
The Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) was one of the first
projects initiated by Russia soon after the former states of the Soviet Union had
acquired independence in 1991.149
Twelve countries150
(out of the total of fifteen
149
Ivan Safranchuk, The Competition for Security Roles in Central Asia, Russia in Global Affairs,
6, (January-March 2008), p. 161. 150
At first, the CIS was formed by ten states as the Baltic States (Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia)
never joined the alliance and Georgia only signed in December 1993 to later withdraw from the
organization in August 2009 after hostilities between Georgia and Russia escalated over the
separatist regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia in August 2008. Turkmenistan also failed to
attend the first CIS summit in Almaty in December 1991. Turkmenistan did join the alliance later
on but it never was an active participant. It therefore downgraded its status to that of CIS observer
in 2005. For further information on the formation process of the CIS, see Alexander Nikitin, The
37
newly independent states) decided to form the alliance in order to cooperate in
various fields of internal and external policies. The primary aim of the CIS was to
ease the transition of newly independent states of the former Soviet Union into
fully sovereign entities, even though it was also seen as a mechanism for
positioning Moscow at the centre of the post-Soviet space.151
The Collective Security Treaty (CST) has its origins in the CIS and was
signed by several of its member states on 15 May 1992.152
Presidents of six of the
twelve CIS nations adhered to the treaty, notably Armenia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, and it was signed in Tashkent,
Uzbekistan.153
Azerbaijan, Belarus and Georgia would all sign the treaty in 1993,
while Turkmenistan never ratified the treaty because of its desire to acquire
neutral status, which was accepted by the UN General Assembly on 12 December
1995.154
Moldova and Ukraine also refused any military cooperation in the CIS
framework. The treaty then entered into force on 20 April 1994 and was registered
at the United Nations on 1 November 1995.155
The CST was signed for a period of
five years with the possibility of renewing it for another period of five years.
From the beginning, member states of the CIS had much difficulty in
agreeing on how to react on various political and security issues that arose in the
nineties. A clause within the CIS Charter foresaw commitments among member
states to military and security cooperation, but in reality only half of the members
agreed to this need, while the other half feared it as opening the way to a return of
Russian hegemony.156
The military mechanism of the Commonwealth was
therefore ill defined and never used in serious conflicts that broke out, for
example, in South Ossetia (1991-1992), Nagorno-Karabakh (1992-1994),
End of the Post-Soviet Space: The Changing Geopolitical Orientations of the Newly Independent
States, Russia and Eurasia Briefing Paper 07/01, (London: Chatham House, February 2007). 151
Stephen Aris, Russia´s Approach to Multilateral Cooperation in the Post-Soviet Space: CSTO,
EurAsEC and SCO, Russian Analytical Digest, 76, (15th of April 2010), p. 2. 152
Alyson J.K. Bailes, “Regional Security cooperation in the former Soviet area”, in SIPRI
Yearbook 2007: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security, Stockholm: International
Peace Research Institute, 2007, p. 174. 153
J. H. Saat, The Collective Security Treaty Organization, Central Asian Series 05/09, (Surrey:
Conflict Studies Research Centre, 2005), p. 3. 154
Valentinas Mite, CIS: Turkmenistan Reduces Ties To “Associate Member”, Radio Free
Europe, Radio Liberty, (August 29, 2005), http://www.rferl.org/content/article/1061002.html,
accessed december 3 2010.
155 J. H. Saat, op.cit., p. 3.
156 Karsten Jakob Møller, “Collective Security Treaty Organisation: An Entangling Alliance”, in
Peter Dahl Truelshen (ed.) International Organisations: The Role in Conflict Management (203-
223), (Copenhagen: Royal Danish Defence College, 2009), p. 205.
38
Abkhazia (1992-1994), Transdniestria (1992), nor during the civil war in
Tajikistan that persisted from 1992-1997.157
The treaty had a clause on mutual
assistance in case of its member states being threatened by aggression, but as the
above conflicts show, the treaty never lived up to its vision of collective security,
or at least not when member states were fighting each other.158
3.2. From CST to CSTO
By the late 1990s political extremism, terrorism, separatism, and organized crime
syndicalism had grown so intensively in the post-Soviet space that they motivated
political efforts of the Eurasian region to reconsider multilateral approaches to
tackling these new threats emanating from non-state actors.159
The Collective
Security Treaty was up for prolongation in 1999, but Azerbaijan, Georgia and
Uzbekistan decided to withdraw from the treaty that same year. Following armed
breakouts in the Kyrgyz region in the summers of 1999 and 2000, the Russian
administration took the initiative at CIS summits in Minsk and Bishkek to fortify
the Collective Security Treaty.160
The clashes in Kyrgyzstan demonstrated once
again the need to pool efforts for enhancing the military network, but the CST in
its five first years had not shown itself effective in doing so. It was therefore
thought necessary to come up with a better structure.
The terrorist attacks of 9/11 and the US invasion of Afghanistan that
ensued gave an important impetus for regional cooperation with states that had for
a while been eager to eradicate terrorist movements in the region. Central Asian
states, in particular Uzbekistan, quickly drew Washington‟s attention both as rear
basing areas for the operations in Afghanistan, and as „front line‟ states with an
important role in checking transnational terrorist and criminal movements. The
USA‟s approaches were at first well received and it started establishing logistical
base facilities in Central Asian states, beginning with the Khanabad base in
southern Uzbekistan and the Ganci base not far from Bishkek in Kyrgyzstan.161
Even though Russia was suspicious about having US military commands in its
157
Karsten Jakob Møller, op.cit., p. 204. 158
J. H. Saat, The Collective Security Treaty Organization, Central Asian Series, February 2005,
p. 3. 159
Gregory Gleason & Marat Shaihutdinov, Collective Security and Non-State Actors in Eurasia,
International Studies Perspectives, 6, 2005, p. 276. 160
Ivan Safranchuk, The Competition for Security Roles in Central Asia, Russia in global affairs,
6, March 2008, p. 164. 161
ibid.
39
near abroad, Russian officials did not interfere in these developments. Moscow
did however feel a need to make balancing moves once relations started to
deteriorate with the US, essentially because of the war in Iraq launched in 2003,
but also because of their differing positions on several international issues,
notably on Iran, Kosovo and North Korea. Therefore Russia started stationing its
troops and began with the Kant airbase in Kyrgyzstan, in close proximity (only 30
kilometres away) to Bishkek where the US base was stationed.162
Russia also
strengthened its position in Tajikistan where it had been responsible for border
security with Afghanistan ever since the end of the USSR, and installed a Russian
airbase near Dushanbe in Tajikistan.163
A new web of cooperativeness was in the
making.
Meanwhile in May 2002, at the 10-year anniversary summit of the CST in
Moscow, the remaining members164
of the treaty had agreed on formally
institutionalizing the CST. The institution then came into being in 2003 under the
name of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).165
It included three
„regional groups of forces‟, with Russia as a leading member of all of them: the
western group comprising Russia and Belarus; the South Caucasus group
comprising Russia and Armenia; and the Central Asian group with Russia,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.166
It took the CSTO a couple of years to
establish a strategy and during its first years it concentrated on promoting the
institution and seeking international recognition from already established
organizations.
During a summit meeting of the CIS heads of state in June 2005, members
of the CSTO announced a plan for the development of an integrated air defence
system and the upgrading of rapid deployment forces in Central Asia.167
It was
also decided to create a commission for military-economic cooperation in order to
deepen relations between the military industries of the member states.168
This
162
ibid. 163
ibid. 164
e.g. The presidents of Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan. 165
Richard Weitz, The CIS is dead: long live the CSTO, Central Asia-Caucasus Institute Analyst
(August 2 2006), http://cacianalyst.org/?q=node/3725, accessed October 27 2010. 166
Amina Afzal, Security Cooperation in Central Asia: The Changing Role of Multilateral
Organisations, Strategic Studies, 26(4), (Winter 2006), n.p. http://www.issi.org.pk/old-
site/ss_Detail.php?dataId=408, accessed June 17 2011. 167
ibid. 168
ibid.
40
meeting confirmed the transfer of military affairs from the CIS to the CSTO and
in August that same year, the CIS ceased to be a framework for military
cooperation.169
The priorities of the CSTO were finally outlined including
cooperation in air defence, production of weapons, training of military personnel
and peacekeeping activities.170
Structurally speaking, the CSTO is as of today composed of several
permanent organs including the Council on Collective Security (CCS), the
Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs (CMFA), the Council of Ministers of
Defence (CMD), the Committee of Secretaries of the Security Councils (CSSC), a
Russian Secretary-General, a Secretariat situated in Moscow and a Joint Staff. The
highest body of the organization is the Council on Collective Security (CCS)
which is composed by the countries‟ Heads of States.171
The CCS meets annually
and has a rotating chairmanship.
3.2.1. The CSTO’s main activities
As outlined by the CSTO‟s Secretary General, Nikolai Bordyuzha, the current
goals and activities of the organization: “are to strengthen peace and international
and regional security and stability, and to defend on a collective basis the
independence, territorial integrity, and sovereignty of member states. Priority in
achieving these ends is given to political means.”172
The CSTO has thus defined
three main goals and fields of action for its efforts to guarantee and strengthen
national, regional and international security, namely (1) reinforcing stability and
building confidence through political cooperation between member states as well
as with non-members, (2) combating non-traditional threats to security – in
particular terrorism and drug trafficking which are seen as the most dangerous
challenges for the members of the CSTO – through joint efforts and (3) fighting
against traditional threats to security with the development and improvement of
the military dimension of member states.173
169
ibid. 170
Marcin Kaczmarski, Russia Creates a New Security System to Replace the CIS, EurasiaNet, 10
January 2006, http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insight/articles/pp011106.shtml, accessed 17
June 2011. 171
Nikolai Bordyuzha, op.cit., p. 340-341. 172
Nikolai Bordyuzha, “The Collective Security Treaty Organization: A Brief Overview”
(translated from Russian by Peter Morley), in Ursel Schlichting (ed.) OSCE Yearbook 2010 (p.
339-350), (Munich: Nomos, 2011), p. 339. 173
Nikolai Bordyuzha, op.cit., p. 340.
41
Operational and military preparations for joint action by CSTO forces are
carried out through joint exercices and training. Since 2004, combined-corps
exercises have been held annually under the name Rubezh.174
During such
exercises, collective decision-making procedures are put to the test as well as the
preparation and execution of joint operational practices by the forces of the
organization‟s collective security system.175
Joint activities in the fight against international terrorism have been
undertaken and the CSTO has maintained close working contacts with the UN
Security Council‟s Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC), the OSCE‟s176
Action
against Terrorism Unit (ATU), and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime
(UNODC).177
The legal basis for cooperation is developing and work is still
underway to create a framework for personnel training and for providing units
with specialized equipment and tools.178
Combating drug trafficking is another challenge the CSTO has been facing
and the international anti-drug operation Kanal has been held on a regular basis
under the command of the CSTO.179
The aim is to block drug flows emanating
from Afghanistan. Over a dozen such operations have been held since 2003 and
over 200 tonnes of illegal substances have been seized during these.180
Many non-
member states have taken part in the operations as observers181
as well as
international organizations like the OSCE, Interpol, and the Eurasian Group on
Combating Money Laundering and Financing Terrorism (EAG).182
Most of the
CSTO‟s practical efforts have involved fighting drug smuggling and it can be said
that the work so far has had some positive results. Russia has been arguing for
several years that the problem cannot be eradicated unless the entire international
community joins efforts. 90 percent of world‟s heroin emanates from Afghanistan
174
Nikolai Bordyuzha, op.cit., p. 342. 175
ibid. 176
i.e. the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe 177
Nikolai Bordyuzha, op.cit., p. 345. 178
Nikolai Bordyuzha, op.cit., p. 344. 179
Nikolai Bordyuzha, op.cit., p. 345. 180
ibid. 181
i.e. Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, China, Colombia, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Iran,
Latvia, Lithuania, Mongolia, Pakistan, Poland, Romania, Spain, Syria, Turkey, Turkmenistan,
Ukraine, the US, and Venezuela. 182
Nikolai Bordyuzha, op.cit., p. 345.
42
and over 20 percent of it is consumed in Russia.183
In Russia‟s opinion not enough
has been done to fight this evil and if stability is to be reached in Afghanistan, the
drug issue has to be settled once and for all.184
Peacekeeping activities are also a focus for development within the
framework of the CSTO since the signature of the Agreement on Peacekeeping
Activities in October 2007, which came into force on 15 January 2009.185
The
agreement implies carrying out peacekeeping activities on the territory of member
states after a decision taken by the CCS and on the basis of an official request
from a member, or in accordance to a resolution taken by the UN Security
Council.186
The CSTO‟s Collective Peacekeeping Forces (CPF) can include
military, police, and civilian personnel and are trained by CSTO‟s joint
programmes, equipped with weapons and communication tools accordingly, and
follow regular joint exercises and training sessions.187
The CSTO has however
been criticized for its attitude during and after the Kyrgyzstan crisis in June 2010,
when interethnic clashes broke out between Kyrgyz and Uzbeks in the southern
part of the state. The CSTO decided not to intervene even though an official
request had been sent out by the Kyrgyz government. A year later, the CSTO‟s
Secretary General stated that the decision not to interfere188
in what was at the
time qualified as the internal affairs of a member state was correct and was taken
in accordance with the founding charter of the organization.189
The deployment of
CSTO peacekeeping forces has therefore not yet been put to the test.
The CSTO has also been working towards consolidating an efficient
framework to counteract illegal migration and trafficking in human beings, and to
ensure information security. The organization is establishing wider and deeper
183
Alexander Vatutin, NATO and CSTO to unite against Afghan drug threat, The Voice of Russia,
30 September 2010, http://english.ruvr.ru/2010/09/30/23190598.html, accessed 19 January 2011. 184
ibid. 185
Nikolai Bordyuzha, op.cit., p. 343. 186
ibid. 187
ibid. 188
A. Maratov, CSTO Secretary General: Refusal from entering CSTO peacekeeping forces to
Kyrgyzstan is conscious, Trend, 15 August 2011,
http://en.trend.az/regions/casia/kazakhstan/1918572.html, accessed 2 September 2011. 189
As article 5 of the Charter of the CSTO stipulates: “The Organization shall operate on the basis
of strict respect for the independence, voluntary participation and equality of rights and obligations
of the member States and non-interference in matters falling within the national jurisdiction of
the member States.” (bolded by author), cf.
http://untreaty.un.org/unts/144078_158780/5/9/13289.pdf
43
cooperation between member states in order to respond more effectively to
emergency situations, be they man-made or natural.190
3.2.2. Russia’s preponderance within the CSTO
Central Asia is of great strategic importance for Russia, both in general and for
combating terrorism and illegal drug trafficking, and since the installation of US
airbases in the region, Moscow has sought to strengthen its presence as well.
Central Asian states have simply not been able to stand on their own since
independence and have had to seek assistance from military powers to secure their
zone, which has led to a certain dependency. Russia has furthermore used the
opportunity to increase its control over the Central Asian military establishments
through the CSTO‟s command structure and joint staff. 191
The Collective Rapid
Reaction Force (CRRF) joint staff which was established in 2004 was in reality a
matter of CSTO troops following Russian command.192
The joint staff comprised
55 officers, half of them being Russian while the other half had nationalities from
the other member states.193
Russia is also the only member state providing well
established military institutions for training, and the majority of Central Asian
military officers train in Russian academies.194
It is therefore likely that the senior
staff members of the CSTO are prone to follow a Russian military vision and
culture, and as such the CRRF can be considered as to being under full Russian
command. This also has implications for Central Asian states being able to
construct military policies independent from Moscow. Adding to this, although
the control over the CRRF seems to be multilateral as it reports to CSTO
institutions such as the Council on Collective Security (CCS) or the Council of
Ministers of Defence (CMD), these latter bodies only meet periodically.195
In
between meetings, the CRRF reports to CSTO coordination bodies like the Anti-
Terror Center (ATC) in Bishkek, which is formally supervised by the Russian
Federal Security Service (FSB) director or the Secretariat situated in Moscow.196
190
Nikolai Bordyuzha, op.cit., p. 345-346. 191
Alexander Frost, The Collective Security Treaty Organization, the Shangai Cooperation
Organization, and Russia„s Strategic Goals in Central Asia, China and Eurasia Forum Quarterly,
7(3), 2009, p. 86. 192
ibid. 193
ibid. 194
ibid. 195
Gregory Gleason & Marat Shaihutdinov, op.cit., p. 281. 196
ibid.
44
The connection to top Russian officials suggests that orders could very well be
given to the CRRF by Moscow while bypassing other member states‟
ministries.197
The CSTO‟s Secretariat which is located in Moscow is responsible for
matters related to the organization, its administration, the budget and all advisory
services.198
The Secretary General, Nikolai Bordyuzha, has a crucial role within
the organization. Not only is he Russian, but he is a Russian General as well,
former head of the Russian National Security Council, and a close associate to
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and President Dmitri Medvedev.199
The
connections between him and the Kremlin are therefore obvious. His tasks consist
among others of drawing up the CSTO‟s annual budget and coordinating all draft
proposals and documents.200
Bordyuzha is the public face of the organization and
is an active Secretary General as he often writes in academic journals about the
current role and future works of the CSTO.201
As noted by Alexander Frost:
It is he who announces expansions of the CRRF, he who attends and
observes CSTO military exercises, and he who liaises with the media about
the CSTO‟s role in a global sense, offering his opinions on possible
cooperation or confrontation with NATO. [...] As head of the secretariat it is
Bordyuzha and his staff who turn directives into reality. In short, Nikolai
Bordyuzha exercises a huge degree of influence within the organization and
is its leading member. While technically committed to the organization
rather than a single member state he is no doubt firmly committed to
carrying out the wishes of the Russian leadership within the organization.202
This leads to a provocative question whether the Secretary General of the CSTO
can be regarded as more important and influential – at least as regards CSTO
work – than the heads of state of the other member countries of the organization.
It is therefore timely to take a look at the behaviour and role of the other member
states within the CSTO.
197
Alexander Frost, op.cit., p. 87. 198
Alexander Frost, op.cit., p. 88. 199
ibid. 200
ibid. 201
The official language of the CSTO is Russian and the writings of the Secretary General are
therefore in Russian. Some of his works have been translated and I would like to specially thank
Mr. Pál Dunay for sending me one translation of Bordyuzha‟s writings which has come in handy
when outlining the current structure and role of the organization, namely Nikolai Bordyuzha, “The
Collective Security Treaty Organization: A Brief Overview” (translated from Russian by Peter
Morley), in Ursel Schlichting (ed.) OSCE Yearbook 2010 (p. 339-350), (Munich: Nomos, 2011). 202
Alexander Frost, op.cit., p. 88-89.
45
3.2.3. The balancing and bandwagoning behaviour of the CSTO’s
member states
Russia has shown its full commitment to the CSTO but the behaviour of other
member states has led to questions about whether they are equally committed with
Russia. Some seem to use it as a tool to secure specific national interests, while
others seem simply not to trust Russia‟s intentions and have been wary of
depending solely on the organization for handling security issues.
Before the institutionalization of the CSTO, only Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan
and Tajikistan of the Central Asian states had remained members of the Collective
Security Treaty and only Tajikistan welcomed Russian military cooperation.203
Several events at the end of the 20th
century reminded states in the region however
that they could not assure their own security. The bombings in Tashkent,
Uzbekistan in February 1999 and the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan‟s (IMU)
offensive in Kyrgyzstan in August 1999 proved the vulnerability of Central Asian
states to transnational terrorism.204
As already mentioned, Afghanistan already
served as a major source of instability in Central Asia and prior to the terrorist
attacks on the United States in 2001, the international community had not been
interested in the calls of Central Asian states who were reaching out for help in
tackling the major threat from Afghanistan‟s Taliban rulers. This explains why
initially, Central Asian states were willing to provide the US with all the help
possible in order to defeat the Taliban and several US bases were constructed.
Once the Taliban were removed from power, however, and Western plans for
transforming Afghanistan were revealed, the US presence in the region was not
equally welcomed. In fact, the so-called „colour revolutions‟ in Georgia (2003), in
Ukraine (2004) and Kyrgyzstan (2005) were seen as a direct consequence of the
USA‟s strengthened position and influence in the post-Soviet periphery.205
All of
a sudden, the US was seen as putting itself forward as an alternative hegemon
devoted to democratizing the region and spreading its western values. Many at
that moment saw in Russia a better partner in securing their zone, above all as it
professed not to interfere in internal affairs but in practice was ready to shore up
authoritarian regimes. The example of Uzbekistan‟s successive shifts between a
203
Michael Mihalka, Not Much of a Game: Security Dynamics in Central Asia, China and Eurasia
Forum Quarterly, 5(2), 2007, p. 30. 204
ibid. 205
Michael Mihalka, op.cit., p. 26.
46
pro-Moscow and pro-Western stance well illustrates the importance of such
factors.
When Uzbekistan withdrew from the CST in 1999, it decided to join a
forum set up in 1996 by those states of the ex-Soviet area that sought to align
themselves most closely with the West and resist Russian domination; namely
GUAM, known today as the Organization for Democracy and Economic
Development206
. It was formed initially by two members of the CST - Azerbaijan
and Georgia - and two other non-members, namely Ukraine and Moldova. GUAM
became GUUAM when Uzbekistan joined, but got rid of the second „U‟ when in
2006 Uzbekistan decided to walk out of the partnership and join the new structure
of the CSTO. Uzbekistan decided to rejoin the CSTO after a massive domestic
oppression of Uzbek citizens by local authorities in 2005. The US and other
western partners had turned their back against the Uzbek regime and called for an
international investigation of the events. This led Uzbek officials to expel the US
base at Khanabad and freeze their relations with NATO. Russia, as did China,
decided on the other hand to support Uzbekistan. They condemned the Western
influence in the region and political rapprochement ensued.207
The reintegration of
Uzbekistan into the CSTO marked clearly the break with the West, and reinforced
strategic partnerships with Russia.208
The other Central Asian states members of the CSTO seem to support
further deepening and integration within the organization essentially to tackle the
dangers emanating from the borders of Afghanistan. At the same time they have
been active in cooperation with NATO through the Partnership for Peace and have
accepted bilateral aid and advice from the USA on non-state challenges, so they
keep their options open. Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan have in fact
balanced their relations quite skilfully with Russia through the CSTO on the one
hand and the US through NATO on the other, as well as using the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization (SCO) framework to validate their economic
cooperation with China.
206
Organization for democracy and Economic Development – GUAM, Global Security,
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/int/guuam.htm, accessed 19 November 2010. 207
Marlène Laruelle, Russia‟s Central Asia Policy and the Role of Russian Nationalism, Central
Asia-Caucasus Institute and Silk Rode Studies Program, April 2008, p. 12,
http://www.isdp.eu/images/stories/isdp-main-pdf/2008_laurelle_russias-central-asia-policy.pdf,
accessed October 17 2010. 208
Marlène Laruelle, op.cit., p. 17.
47
Kyrgyzstan has „played both ends against the middle‟ in a particularly
open and sometimes blunt fashion, but it is in a unique position to do so as the
only state in the world having on its territory both a Russian and an American
base.209
Kyrgyzstan has used that position to get financial contributions from
each. In 2006, Russia announced that it would increase its troops based in Kant
from 300 to around 750 and invest more in military equipment.210
After this
proposal, Kyrgyz officials decided to raise the rental of the US Manas base to 150
million US$ for 2007, which was a hundred times more than what the US had
been paying up until then.211
The US did not give in on the rent and continued
paying 15 million dollars but that year they also launched an aid programme and a
financial package worth 150 million dollars.212
Kyrgyzstan was therefore clearly
using the balancing card to extract financial contributions from both sides.
Russia has always been very active in keeping close ties with Kazakhstan
and Tajikistan. For Tajikistan, Russia has shown its importance in securing the
state and this was proved when Russian troops stepped in and helped Tajikistan
during the civil war from 1992 to 1996.213
Tajik officials have often stated the
importance of good relations with Russia distinguishing this bilateral partnership
from the secondary value of the multilateral institutional frameworks emerging in
the post-Soviet space. As stated by then Foreign Minister of Tajikistan Talbak
Nazarov, in 2004: “Although we [Tajiks] believe that greater cooperation with
neighbouring CIS countries is important to Tajikistan‟s development, constructive
political relations with Russia are a strategic imperative.”214
It is interesting to
make this point because were a civil war to break out in Tajikistan tomorrow, it
would be unlikely Russia could intervene through the CSTO as it would be
regarded as an internal matter and could well be viewed differently in various
CSTO capitals. It is not known however whether Russian led troops would step in
directly to protect Russian ethnic citizens living in Tajikistan and/or to secure the
country‟s outer border, which is especially sensitive for Moscow given its
closeness to Afghanistan. It needs to be kept in mind that Tajikistan has a 1,400
209
Marlène Laruelle, op.cit., p. 15. 210
ibid. 211
ibid. 212
ibid. 213
ibid. 214
Country Risk Summary: TAJIKISTAN, Emerging Europe Monitor: Eurasia, 8(3), March 2004,
p. 5.
48
kilometre-long border with Afghanistan215
, making it vulnerable to any smuggling
through its state. Until the takeover of border control by the Tajik army in October
2005, Russian military troops safeguarded them.216
The Russian army has
however remained present in Tajikistan since the opening of the first permanent
base and the largest one outside Russia at the end of 2004.217
Kazakhstan and Russia both regard their bilateral relationship as a
strategic partnership. As stated in former Russian Foreign Policy: “Kazakhstan is
Russia‟s key strategic partner and ally in the Central Asian region.”218
Several
important facts contribute to Russia‟s special attention to Kazakhstan. Firstly
Russia and Kazakhstan share the longest land border in the world, making
Kazakhstan Russia‟s natural gateway to Central Asia.219
Secondly, Kazakhstan
has large reserves of natural resources and has increased its economic status in the
region last years.220
Its participation in the Customs Union with Belarus and
Russia is for example of vital importance. Thirdly, 30 percent of the Kazakh
population is ethnically Russian, making it the largest Russian community living
in Central Asia.221
For its part, Kazakhstan hopes to become “a solid bridge
between countries, regions, civilizations, and cultures”222
and has constructed
multiple partnerships ranging from the European Union‟s (EU) “Path to Europe”
program, NATO‟s PfP, its membership in the SCO, as well as its membership to
several Russian initiated institutions. Astana has on several occasions stressed the
importance of developing relations with the OSCE, NATO, EU and the USA, but
only if not at the expense of relations with Russia.223
At the meeting of Foreign
Ministers of the member states in Minsk, Belarus in May 2011, the Kazakh
Minister of Foreign Affairs Yerzhan Kazykhanov stated that “Kazakhstan
considers the CSTO as one of the important tools for interaction and coordination
215
Marlène Laruelle, op.cit., p. 14. 216
ibid. 217
ibid. 218
A Survey of Russian Federation Foreign Policy, Ministry for Foreign Affairs of the Russian
Federation, (March 2007),
http://www.mid.ru/Brp_4.nsf/arh/89A30B3A6B65B4F2C32572D700292F74?OpenDocument,
accessed 2 September 2011. 219
Aigerim Shilibekova, Russian-Kazakh Security Relations Revisited, Russian Analytical Digest,
87, 19 November 2010, p. 7. 220
ibid. 221
Fatima Kukeyeva, Developments and Trends in the Russian-Kazakh Strategic Partnership,
Russian Analytical Digest, 87, 19 November 2010, p. 6. 222
Fatima Kukeyeva, op.cit., p. 5. 223
ibid.
49
[…], which rightly deserves to be seen as the centre of regional cooperation in the
sphere of security”.224
The CSTO is however not only considered as a defense
organization by Kazakhstan but also as an important framework for strengthening
bilateral and multilateral relations with other member states of the organization.225
Kazakhstan for example has regularly promoted the idea of widening the areas of
action of the CSTO, making it “more multifunctional, and capable of addressing
problems of a wider spectrum”226
. Kazakhstan was also the only member state to
sign with Russia the CSTO Plan of Joint Actions for 2009-2010, which covered
economic and trade aspects of relations within the CSTO.227
The economically
booming Kazakhstan has therefore used the CSTO in a very wide sense and is
certainly in the position to do so in the years to come.
Armenia has aligned with Moscow through the CSTO because it regards
Russia as its security guarantor. Armenia views the CSTO as “a framework for
Russian protection of Armenian territorial gains against Azerbaijan”228
following
the now frozen Armenia/Azerbaijan conflict of the early 1990s when Armenia
occupied Nagorno-Karabakh. Earlier this year, Armenian Defence Minister
Seyran Ohanian said at a security conference in Yerevan that “[g]iven Armenia‟s
membership in the CSTO, we can count on an appropriate response and the
support of our allies in the organization, who have specific responsibilities to each
other and the ability to react adequately to potential aggression”229
. Even though it
would be up to the CSTO‟s interpretation to decide to intervene if conflicts were
to escalate in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, Armenia does view the CSTO as
an important forum to strengthen its position against Azerbaijan.
Finally, Belarus has often used its membership in the CSTO in order to
pressure Russia to maintain or improve its bilateral economic privileges.230
In
224
CSTO Member States‟ Foreign Ministers Review Coordinated Policies, Astana Calling, 160,
31 May 2011, n.p. 225
Aigerim Shilibekova, op.cit., p. 9. 226
CSTO Member States‟ Foreign Ministers Review Coordinated Policies, op.cit., n.p. 227
Aigerim Shilibekova, op.cit., p. 9. 228
Vladimir Socor, The CSTO: Missions, Capabilities, Political Ambitions, Eurasia Daily
Monitor, 6(25), February 6, 2009, n.p.,
http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews[tt_news]=34473, accessed 19 January
2011. 229
Joshua Kucera, Armenia, the CSTO and Collective Security, EurasiaNet.org, May 23, 2011,
http://www.eurasianet.org/node/63541, accessed 19 January 2011. 230
Fyodor Lukyanov, Uncertain World: CSTO must evolve into military alliance, Ria Novosti,
April 28, 2011, http://en.rian.ru/columnists/20110428/163750621.html, accessed 23 May 2011.
50
2009, Belarus played the card of threatening to pull out more than once in the
hope of receiving some Russian concessions. That year Belarusian President
Alexander Lukashenko for example boycotted a CSTO summit (in response to
Russia‟s ban on Belarusian dairy products for a month), declined to take on the
rotating chairmanship of the organization and declined the signing of the
agreement on strengthening the Collective Rapid Reaction Forces.231
The situation
has changed since then and Belarus holds the rotating chairmanship this year. At
the last CSTO summit some argued that “Belarus was one of the most enthusiastic
summit participants” and Lukashenko used the occasion to state that Belarus did
“not have a single CSTO document that is still not ratified”. 232
In fact, the
President is now actively campaigning for making the CSTO more effective
through the strengthening of the Collective Rapid Reaction Forces.233
A plausible
reason lying behind this shift of Belarusian attitude towards the CSTO may
include the consolidation of the Customs Union between Russia, Kazakhstan and
Belarus. The Union is in the interests of Belarus which is going through a rough
financial crisis. Belarus cannot hope to get any financial aid for the time being
from the West considering the evolution of the authoritarian regime of
Lukashenko which has lately been much criticized in the West.234
Russia‟s dominance combined with other members‟ varying motives and
degrees of enthusiasm does not mean that the latter fail to get any say within the
CSTO. They do have a voice and they have used it more than once and gone
against Russia‟s will. The refusal of some member states to support Russia in
recognizing the independence of the separatist regions of South Ossetia and
Abkhazia after the Georgian war in August 2008 is one example. The fact that the
Central Asians in particular have constructed ties with other international partners
like the US essentially through the framework of NATO, and with China through
the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), has allowed them to exploit the
trend of multilateral institutionalization in their own way for purposes of balance
231
Matthew Frear, Friends or Foes? Developments in Relations between Russia and Belarus,
Russian Analytical Digest, 87, 19 November 2010, p. 2. 232
Belarus Needs CSTO, CSTO Needs Belarus, Belarus Digest, 13 August 2011,
http://belarusdigest.com/story/belarus-needs-csto-csto-needs-belarus-5098, accessed 9 September
2011. 233
ibid. 234
Ilya Pitalev, President Lukashenko says West trying „to strangle‟ Belarus, Ria Novosti, 21 April
2011, http://en.rian.ru/world/20110421/163631123.html?id=, accessed 9 September 2011.
51
against Russia. This has certainly helped the CSTO to survive in a turbulent time;
but whether it points more to an abiding strength or a factor of weakness and
vulnerability in the organization is a question for the next section.
3.3. Strengths and weaknesses in a theoretical perspective
The CSTO is young of age and still in the shaping. Compared to NATO that has
had more than 60 years of experience, the CSTO has not yet completed a decade
since its formal institutionalization. However, its formative period has coincided
with the latest phase of NATO‟s re-invention and has seen both institutions
engaged in similar challenges of security management in an unstable and conflict-
torn Eurasia. It should therefore be pertinent to apply here to the CSTO some of
the same tests and questions already used with NATO to explore the
organization‟s rationale and prospects in the light of various IR theories.
The value of the CSTO is most clearly seen in a realist light when
perceived from Moscow. Throughout history Russia has been acutely sensitive to
threats from its borders and the risk of encirclement. Linking as many as possible
of its Western and Southern neighbours through the CSTO serves the triple
defensive purpose of making it harder for them to attack Russia or fight among
themselves; allowing Russia to help directly or indirectly in strengthening their
outer borders; and preventing or limiting the installation of another regional
hegemon (USA, India or China). This explains the major efforts Moscow has
made for the CSTO‟s success, but it does not necessarily mean that Moscow has
pursued its realist interests in the most logical and successful manner. In the near
term its strategy is complicated by its preference for maintaining differentiated
bilateral relations with each other member state for maximum leverage, which
does make it harder for the rest to gang up against Russia but also works against
solidarity and convergence of strategies in the group.
In fact, Central Asian states lack natural cohesion: most of them actually
have chilly mutual relations, and Russia has not helped – with its discriminatory
practices and occasional divide-and-rule tactics – to restore any kind of friendly
relations between them. For instance, as the economic growth of Kazakhstan has
made it a leading Central Asian state, a status formerly held by Uzbekistan as the
52
most populous, the relationship between the two has often been hostile.235
The
crisis between ethnic Uzbeks and Kyrgyz in the summer of 2010 also shows the
fragility in relations between member states. Even though they may be neighbours
and members of the same organization, it does not mean they have established
natural friendships. Instead relations are mainly strategic and each strives to
strengthen its national interests. This works against the possibility of creating a
cohesive organization based on mutual interests.
In the longer term, the feature that local states do share – i.e. more-or-less
authoritarian regimes – and Russia‟s realist choice of policies and structures
designed to prop up those regimes, may also lead to the whole security web being
fragile and in some ways inefficient. Russia‟s willingness to support authoritarian
regimes in the region has been explained by Russian officials as a necessity for
the time being as states with strong leaders are viewed as being the only tool for
developing societies and leading them out of economic difficulties. The meaning
of the state‟s role for Russia is defined in terms of order versus chaos, or as then
Russian President Putin stated in 1999:
For Russians a strong state is not an anomaly, which should be got rid of.
Quite the contrary, they [Russians] see it as a source and guarantor of order
and the initiator and main driving force of any change. Modern Russian
society does not identify a strong and effective state with a totalitarian
state.236
Further, by closing its eyes to humanitarian violations of member countries,
Moscow has lured them away from closer Western partnerships, thus allowing it
to build up its strategic „camp‟ in the region to a status more equal to the Western
one. As stated throughout this thesis, the main goal of Russia seems to be just this:
creating a cohesive group of states that respect the principle of sovereignty and
non-interference with internal matters. The trouble is that a grouping of
dictatorships is inherently non-cohesive: authoritarian regimes are likely to follow
their national interests above and often against the group‟s common benefits. This
235
Jos Boonstra, Russia and Central Asia: From Disinterest to Eager Leadership, EU-Russia
Review, October 2008, p. 72, http://www.eu-russiacentre.org/wp-
content/uploads/2008/10/review_viii_final_13_10.pdf, accessed 12 November 2010. 236
Vladimir Putin, 1999, cited in “The post-Soviet space: a regional security complex around
Russia, in Barry Buzan and Ole Wæver Regions and Powers: The Structure of International
Security (p. 397-422), (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), p. 407.
53
policy seems therefore to fall short and might not lead to the construction of a
stable security spectrum for the long term.
The willingness of smaller members to stay in the CSTO and of
Uzbeikstan to rejoin it can also be explained in realist terms. In a world system
based on anarchy and self-help, states worry about the hegemonic tendencies of
larger actors.237
According to the realist concept of „balance of power‟, states may
join alliances and coalitions in order to balance against a stronger state or group of
states that they see as threatening.238
They will prefer to do so if possible by
working with partners who are not themselves likely to dominate them,239
but in
some conditions they are forced to „bandwagon‟ with the strongest state available,
hoping it will at least shield or deflect the opponent‟s attention.240
Walt argues
that:
[S]mall and weak states in close proximity to a great power are the most
likely candidates for bandwagoning. Because they will be the first victims of
an attack, because potential allies may be scarce or distant, and because they
lack the capabilities to stand alone or alter the balance significantly,
accommodating a neighboring great power may occasionally make more
sense.241
This analysis makes obvious sense in the case of the CSTO if the non-Russian
members are seen as mainly concerned to protect themselves against Western
political interference, and/or the intrusion of the American „sole superpower‟ and
the collective strength of NATO into their region. This may indeed be a sufficient
explanation for a case like Uzbekistan on the one hand, and Belarus which
directly faces an enlarged NATO on its border, on the other. On a practical point,
for Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, the main attraction of being
committed to the CSTO may be the Russian offer to sell military supplies to them
at the same prices and terms applied to the Russian armed forces – being able to
237
Mette Eilstrup-Sangiovanni, The End of Balance-of-Power Theory? A Comment on Wohlforth
et al.´s „Testing Balance-of-Power Theory in World History“, European Journal of International
Relations, 15(2), (2009), p. 352, http://ejt.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/15/2/347, accessed 21
November 2009. 238
ibid. 239
Stephen M. Walt, Alliance Formation and the Balance of Power, International Security, 9(4),
(Spring, 1985), p. 5. 240
ibid. 241
Stephen M. Walt, op.cit., p. 18.
54
arm itself is the first realist dictate for a state, and these governments have few
other willing suppliers.242
States balance however against threats of which state power is only one
component,243
so to the extent that the Central Asians also hope to use the CSTO
against non-state and transnational opponents, their relationship with Moscow
may be more subtle than traditional bandwagoning. Further, it is clear from the
above that states like Kazakhstan and Kyrgystan are also using NATO and other
external relationships to offset their one-sided dependence on Russia within the
CSTO: so they are balancing against Russia, as well as bandwagoning with it. If
that side of their strategy either became stronger or became impossible, would
their realist calculations still point to maintaining the CSTO as it is?
If the CSTO is looked at through the lens of neo-liberalism, one can point
to the Russian rhetoric which focuses on establishing a wider security system that
would follow resolutions from the United Nations‟ Security Council, thus limiting
the scope for unilateral decisions of specific states. The Russian leadership has
over the years come up with ideas of changing and reconstructing the current
framework of how world affairs should be conducted; leading to more cooperation
and mutual assistance of world states in tackling global problems. This goes in
line with neo-liberalism which suggests states can better handle world affairs
within institutional frameworks in which all member states join efforts in order to
more effectively meet current situations. These kind of ideas were present in
Russian Foreign Policy in 2008,244
portraying the CSTO as an organization taking
effective responsibility for its own region in an institutionalized multilateral mode
and in line with UN and OSCE principles fits in very well with this Russian
concept of world governance.
Russia‟s official policy has been “to strengthen the multilateral principles
in world politics and to consolidate the central role of the UN in a new multipolar
system of international relations”.245
However, both Russian actions and Russia‟s
242
Roy Allison, Regionalism, regional structures and security management in Central Asia,
International Affairs, 80(4), (2004), p. 472. 243
Stephen M. Walt, op.cit., p. 35. 244
The Foreign Policy Concept of the Russian Federation, Kremlin, 12 July 2008,
http://archive.kremlin.ru/eng/text/docs/2008/07/204750.shtml, accessed 14 September 2011. 245
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov Meets UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon (press release),
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation (information and press department),
Moscow, 22 April 2011,
55
statements in other contexts raise doubts over the genuineness of Moscow‟s
conversion to institutionalism or its prescription for changing the current world
order. Russia‟s use of institutions and promotion of „alternative‟ world views, as
seen also in the SCO case, seems too obviously linked to the potential benefits for
strengthening its own status in particular political avenues. Russia has for example
more often than not been opposed to any suggestions emanating from other states
on reforming and updating institutions where Russia already has acquired a
valuable seat, when this would mean Russia itself weakening or losing an already
attained status. Ideas of reforming the United Nations are one example. Russia has
been amongst those opposed to widening the circle of privileged nations and this
could primarily be explained by the fear of such reform leading to the loss of
Russia‟s veto power within the Security Council.246
Another contradiction in Russia‟s rhetoric is its approach to reforming the
OSCE and abolishing bloc formations within that organization inherited from the
Cold War period. On the one hand, Russia‟s proposals for a new European
Security Treaty (EST) have been criticized in the West as highlighting the
politico-military, stabilizing, or status quo aspects of the OSCE acquis – which
can be seen as protecting Moscow‟s and its friends‟ positions against further
Western encroachment – while glossing over the progressive and libertarian
principles that were also central to that acquis. Russia itself has been very critical
of the OSCE and active in its demands for reforming the organization, arguing
among other things that it should focus more on politico-military dialogue and
cooperation and less on its „human‟ dimension, which Moscow sees as a mere
excuse for Western pro-democracy interference within Eastern states. Russia has
also demanded to institutionalize the OSCE and grant it a legal personality and
capacity in order to transform it into a full-fledged regional organization.247
On
the other hand, while criticizing „blocs‟ Russia has been active in forming and
strengthening new exclusive groupings of like-minded states such as the CSTO. It
falls short in explaining why this organization can be regarded as a better choice
http://www.mid.ru/bdomp/Brp_4.nsf/arh/82792914499C4BE9C325787E00213772?OpenDocume
nt, accessed 5 September 2011. 246
George Bovt, Russian Foreign Policy under Dmitry Medvedev, The EU-Russia Centre Review,
8, (October 2008), p. 23. 247
Vladimir Socor, Russia-Led Bloc Emerges in OSCE, Eurasia Daily Monitor, 4, 16 November
2007, http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&tx_ttnews[tt_news]=33173, accessed 6
September 2011.
56
for Central Asian states than NATO, simply characterizing the former as „good‟
while the latter is seen as „bad‟.248
Therefore it seems that Russia‟s general
attitude to institutions is to simply use them to multiply its own influence, project
legitimacy and respectability. Strengthening the structure of the CSTO as the
mirror-image of NATO makes it possible for Russia to counter the Western-led
institution with an Eastern organization and to present the latter as somehow
NATO‟s equal.
For the other member states, the willingness to establish multilateral ties
through the CSTO has made it possible for many to use the organization as a
platform to evade more harshly asymmetrical bilateral agreements with Russia.
Membership within CSTO has on several occasions benefitted the member states
and they have been able to use it in order to make their voice heard, as already
noted. Security cooperation within the CSTO makes it possible to attain common
benefits and tackling threats from Afghanistan has shown to be more effective if
jointly attempted by member states. The common interest of stabilizing the
borders with Afghanistan has been an important fact, essentially gluing the
member states together within the organization.
Neoliberal institutionalism also predicts that institutions contribute to the
establishment of common rules and norms on how to best interact on the
international field, making relations between institutional members more stable
and predictive, thus halting the use of violence. The instability and frequent
disputes that still characterize the Western and Southern former Soviet zones, be it
with Russia or between other member states, gives reason to believe that the
institutionalization and internalization of members‟ security ties has not yet been
achieved and it may take some time before the organization can act as a whole.
Member states have joined forces in order to stabilize the region and better secure
their zone but have at the same time failed on several occasions to be internally
stable. Unstable states working towards global stabilization is rather contradictory.
The still prevalent bilateralism between Russia and post-Soviet neighbours also
weakens the neoliberal assumption of states preferring to consolidate multilateral
organizations.
248
ibid.
57
One of the main challenges for neoliberal institutionalists is also the
problem of defection from cooperation and how to avoid this in an anarchic
international system.249
The case of Uzbekistan leaving and rejoining the CSTO
has made it hard for member states to believe it will not happen again. This leads
to questioning the full commitment of member states other than Russia to the
organization. Of course states that seek cooperation do always risk a defecting
partner but institutionalists do claim that if the benefits from cooperation are
attractive, it will push states to cooperate instead. Defecting partners within the
CSTO show that better options are sometimes available. This has however also
happened with NATO when France decided to leave NATO‟s military command
in 1966 and did not rejoin it until 2009.250
There is simply not much that leading
members within organizations can do to stop the sovereign choices of other
member states.
Social constructivism can add some other insights to analyze the strengths
and weaknesses of the CSTO. Constructivists emphasize the role of common
identity and culture, and member states of the CSTO have had ninety years of
establishing some kind of habit through Soviet cooperation. They have a similar
military culture and common (Russian) vocabulary, as well as a political culture
sharing the same vision of a “strong leadership”. This however is only an elite and
military culture, and internal protests at various times in all CSTO member states
raise doubts whether it represents the will of citizens at large. In that sense, even
though member states‟ officials do share common values to a certain point, if
successful internal societal revolutions were to be launched in future this factor
could easily be swept away.
It is interesting to note here that after the „Arab Spring‟ revolutions that
have sprung out in several states (e.g. Egypt, Tunis, Libya, Syria to name a few)
since the beginning of 2011, the CSTO has been showing more interest in
information security than ever before. The revolutions in North Africa and the
Middle East have been related to the growing role of social internet networks that
have made it possible for citizens to join voices and disseminate revolutionary
249
Kristin Ven Bruusgaard & Morten Jeppesen, The unrealised case of NATO-CSTO cooperation:
Explanations and Prospects, Forsvarets forskningsinstitutt (FFI), 22 June 2007, p. 18. 250
Elitsa Vucheva, France signals full return to NATO, EUobserver, 4 April 2008,
http://euobserver.com/13/25921, accessed 14 Septmber 2011.
58
appeals to stand up and fight authoritarian rulings. At an informal summit of
CSTO‟s heads of state in August 2011, members agreed to take up measures to
fight potential threats that the information and cyber space can bring. Kazakh
President Nursultan Nazarbayev stated at the summit that an unregulated
information space may pose “threats to regional security and stability in the CSTO
member states, especially in the light of the latest developments in the world.”251
CSTO leaders‟ clear concern about civilian uprisings in their own countries,
because of more open information sharing on social websites, points to an
inherent weakness of their authoritarian model since the boundaries of the internet
cannot easily be contained and citizens all over the world are striving for more
individual liberties.
If the CSTO had been truly active and successful and created common
experiences, a kind of institutional and collective „acquis‟, it could have created a
new regional identity that would gradually strengthen as old Soviet-based habits
recede – but there is little or no evidence of this happening. Russia has proposed
to create joint events and friendly competitions between military and non-military
personnel since 2008.252
CSTO‟s Secretary General even proposed the creation of
“a CSTO youth development-military-sportive club” which would lead to the
promotion of patriotism in younger generations as well as give the military role of
the CSTO a more positive profile in the different member states.253
Such top-
down and militarized efforts at „shared culture creation‟ have however not yet
borne fruit, and seem unlikely to do so unless something switches the attitude of
Central Asian citizens towards genuine fear of the West.
251
Joshua Kucera, With Eye To Arab Spring, CSTO Strengthens Cyber, Military Powers,
EurasiaNet, 15 August 2011, http://www.eurasianet.org/node/64045, accessed 2 September 2011. 252
Alexander Frost, op.cit., p. 89. 253
ibid.
59
IV. To cooperate or not to cooperate
Members of the CST first invited NATO to cooperate as early as 1993 and contact
was established between the coordinating military bodies in the CIS and the
NATO Joint Command.254
The cooperation was in place for over a year but in
1995 NATO declined the invitation for further contacts.255
As already established
in this thesis, the Partnership for Peace program and the North Atlantic
Cooperation Council (NACC) had been established in the meantime and NATO
began focusing on working with partners bilaterally instead of dealing with the
joint CIS structure. These mechanisms, as already mentioned, did not suffice for
Russia. In the logic of things, once it had reconstructed its own military structure,
Russia saw itself capable of taking a step further and started proposing new
structural cooperation through its own multilateral security institution with
NATO. This was in line with its ambitions to acquire an equal status with other
world powers and it provides a first, straightforward explanation of why Russia
should have been the primary initiator of establishing multilateral ties between the
CSTO and NATO.
Some have indicated that when the CSTO was institutionalizing, in 2002
and 2003, informal requests for such a relationship were already being conveyed
by Russia to NATO representatives.256
Former president of Russia Vladimir Putin
for example hinted at the Rome Summit in 2002 when the NATO-Russia Council
was created that Russia was interested in NATO as a “working instrument”, but
that it was also important that the alliance granted other international
organizations a deeper acknowledgement.257
Putin was mainly referring to the
CSTO which was developing its role more seriously at the time, particularly in its
254
Kristin Ven Bruusgaard & Morten Jeppesen, op.cit., p. 12 255
ibid. 256
ibid. 257
Vladimir Putin, “Address”, in NATO-Russia Council: Rome Summit 2002, op.cit., p. 18.
60
function of combating terrorism.258
Then, once the CSTO was officially
institutionalized, it formally proposed cooperation to NATO following a CSTO
summit in Astana in June 2004, during which the organization adopted a
document on fields of possible cooperation with NATO.259
That same summer,
the CSTO Secretary-General sent a formal request to then NATO Secretary-
General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, proposing to set up cooperation mechanisms
between the institutions.260
NATO did not respond to the request and instead
stayed silent.261
A year later, Vladimir Putin brought up the issue in a meeting
with de Hoop Scheffer during the latter‟s visit in Moscow.262
No hint of a
breakthrough was given after the meeting however and NATO still did not answer
the request. The debate about cooperation between the CSTO and NATO receded
somewhat after that, linked with the general deterioration in relations between
Russia and the West. In recent years however, officials (mainly Russian) have
brought up the possibility of cooperation on several occasions.
With the election in 2008 of the new Russian President Dmitry Medvedev,
new discussions followed on whether to establish multilateral cooperation
between the CSTO and other international organizations like NATO. Medvedev
stated in Berlin on 5 June 2008 that his country wanted to put an end to a world
security structure divided by bloc formations.263
Russia argues that all nations of
the Euro-Atlantic area should pause and question the current security system
which in the view of Russian leadership has „destructive tendencies‟.264
As Russia
sees it, there is still no inclusive security mechanism in Europe for cooperation in
the fields of “countering drug trafficking, terrorism and cybercrime, biosecurity,
258
Alyson J.K. Bailes, “Regional Security cooperation in the former Soviet area”, in SIPRI
Yearbook 2007: Armaments, Disarmament and International Security, op.cit., p. 173. 259
Alexander Nikitin, The End of the Post-Soviet Space: The Changing Geopolitical Orientations
of the Newly Independent States, Russia and Eurasia Briefing Paper 07/01, (London: Chatham
House, February 2007), p. 10; “CSTO Council passed document on main directions of cooperation
with NATO”, http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/10785/, accessed August 17 2011. 260
ibid. 261
Gennedy Pulin, The CSTO and NATO: Allies or enemies?, Voenno-Promyshlennyi Kurier, 27,
(July 2005), p. 2 [Translated by Pavel Pushkin],
http://www.armeniandiaspora.com/showthread.php?33704-THE-CSTO-amp-NATO-Allies-or-
enemies, accessed January 19 2011. 262
ibid. 263
“President of Russia Dmitry Medvedev‟s Speech at Meeting with German Political,
Parliamentary and Civic Leaders”, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation
(Information and Press Department), Berlin, 5 June 2005,
http://www.mid.ru/bdomp/Brp_4.nsf/arh/C080DC2FF8D93629C3257460003496C4?OpenDocum
ent, accessed 5 September 2011. 264
ibid.
61
collective prevention and reaction to emergencies and humanitarian crises,
environmental protection, and efforts to meet environmental challenges, including
global climate change”.265
As the Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs of the
Russian Federation, Alexander Grushko, put it: “ideologically driven stereotypes
should not remain an obstacle to the highly needed cooperation between NATO,
EU, CIS, OSCE and CSTO on concrete security problems, not to mention
Afghanistan”.266
The security cooperation would in this sense make the
participation of states inclusive and equal.
Even though the CSTO has for many years sought to establish a
multilateral cooperative framework with NATO, the latter has done its best to
avoid addressing the issue altogether. Most of the time, NATO has met the
CSTO‟s invitations with silence, giving the impression that the idea is considered
irrelevant for the western organization. NATO would probably at least have
addressed the question and answered it in a diplomatic manner were it seen to
have real-world relevance. This has not been the case however. Ever since the first
proposition was made and still up to today, Russian officials have expressed their
discontent with the lack of response from NATO, signalling that “[t]hey have
simply ignored us”.267
The next section will examine the reasons put forward for multilateral
cooperation between the two entities, and test the logic of Western rejection of
these reasons, by applying the same three IR theories that have guided the analysis
up to now.
4.1. Reasons to cooperate
The emergence of new global problems has made it difficult for states to tackle
them by themselves and states have therefore sought to join forces with others
through alliances. Not only Russia, but other member states of the CSTO as well
as must see concrete advantages in collaborating against such threats, especially in
265
Sergei Karaganov & Timofei Bordachev, Russia and the U.S.: Reconfiguration, Not Resetting,
Russian in Global Affairs, 3, (5 September 2009), p. 13. 266
Alexander Grushko, “Proposals from the Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on the New
European Security Treaty: Origins and Prospects”, International Conference Towards a New
European Security Architecture?, The International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), London,
9 December 2009, http://www.iiss.org/programmes/russia-and-
eurasia/events/conferences/conferences-2009/towards-a-new-european-security-
architecture/keynote-address-alexander-grushko/?locale=en, accessed 19 January 2011. 267
Kristin Ven Bruusgaard & Morten Jeppesen, op.cit., p. 23.
62
the economic and security fields, as shown by the fact that since the end of the
Cold War numerous regional institutions have been constituted in the post Soviet
space.
For Russia, the current security regime simply does not seem to be
effective enough to tackle new and complex threats with Afghanistan being the
most salient example. In fact, Russian officials have pushed for multilateral
cooperation between the CSTO and NATO essentially in order to handle the
problems emanating from the situation in Afghanistan. This also goes in line with
neoliberalism which claims that by joining forces, states seek to maximize
absolute gains; since stabilizing Afghanistan is in the common interest of both
NATO and the CSTO, cooperation seems to be an obvious choice. For the
members of the CSTO, and especially Russia, the major concern with regards to
Afghanistan is the massive increase of roughly 40,000 percent in the opium
cultivation, since the coalition invaded Afghanistan in 2001, and the subsequent
outflow of opium and heroin.268
According to a report by the United Nations
Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) released in June 2010, hard drugs made
from poppy cultivation in Afghanistan kill an estimated 100,000 people per
year.269
Russian authorities claim that 30-40,000 of those killed are Russian
citizens, and most of the addicts who have reached the number of 2 million in
Russia are young people (aged between 18-39).270
This death toll is higher than
the total casualty figure during the Soviet war in Afghanistan in the 1980s.271
Russia has long criticized NATO‟s inability or even unwillingness to
tackle this problem of opium production. At present, NATO‟s policy on
eradicating poppy fields has proven to be highly ineffective. Opium poppy fields
eradication operations are left in the hands of Afghan counternarcotics agencies,
which use manual primitive methods, while NATO concentrates mainly on
defeating the insurgency and re-establishing a stronger government in Kabul
based on law and order. NATO‟s position on the narcotic problem is that with the
rebuilding of the Afghan economy and society, Afghans will begin to earn their
268
Richard Weitz, Russia„s dangerous fix, The AfPak Channel, 21 June 2010,
http://afpak.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2010/06/21/russias_dangerous_fix, accessed 19 January
2011. 269
ibid. 270
ibid. 271
ibid.
63
livings through other means than with drugs. Russia on the other hand believes
that the grass-root problem needs to be handled first, namely the drug production,
before Afghanistan can have any chance in succeeding in the rebuilding of its
society. As mentioned earlier, one of the few areas where the CSTO has actually
proven its worth is in counternarcotics operations. Therefore, this issue area could
be a viable option for cooperation. However the difference of priorities on how to
tackle this problem seems to stand in the way of that happening. This goes in line
with traditional realist thinking which predicts that states only cooperate on the
basis of shared interests and when faced with common threats. For Russia and its
allies in the CSTO, one of the biggest threats emanating from Afghanistan is the
increased production of drugs flowing into its territory, while for the US and its
allies in NATO, the struggle in Afghanistan is part of the broader war on terror
initially launched by the Bush administration.
Russia has been for a long time striving to obtain equal status with central
global powers like the US or China, and one of its means of achieving it may be
through the formal international legitimization of the CSTO. By legitimizing the
CSTO, Russia could both enjoy standing on equal footing with the US as a
dominant power within a regional security organization - similar to the US
position within NATO; and also shore up its influence with the CSTO member
states, possibly undermining their existing bilateral ties through the PfP or the
EAPC. NATO would then have to deal with the CSTO as a whole, risking
jeopardizing the effectiveness that bilateral ties can entail. As the CSTO is based
on consensus between member states, like NATO, the risk of other member states
vetoing decisions or operations for potentially useful cooperation may be too high.
Neoliberalist institutionalism claims that institutions can lower transaction costs,
but in the case of possible CSTO-NATO cooperation, it is likely that the
transaction costs – in the sense of reaching agreement and consensus – would be
too high and therefore inhibit cooperation. If looked at from a neorealist
perspective, national interests would carry more weight than the interests of the
organization as a whole, if one state saw strong reason to use its veto.
This analysis underlines that there are both practical and political reasons –
some reasonable and some selfish – as to why the CSTO is seeking to cooperate
with NATO. The last section will examine whether or not such cooperation is
plausible.
64
4.2. Reasons not to cooperate
There is limited information publicly available regarding NATO‟s attitude
towards creating formal ties with the CSTO. One of the few examples is a
recommendation revealed in 2010 from a working group of experts who were
preparing the ground for a new strategic concept for NATO that was released by
the end of that year. It was recommended that NATO should forge more formal
ties with other organizations, including the CSTO, and that: “[a]ny such
relationship should be based on the principles of equality, mutual trust, and
mutual benefit”.272
However, when the new strategic concept was released, there
was no mention of the CSTO and again the focus was primarily on strengthening
bilateral ties with Russia.273
This comes as no surprise, as according to several
NATO officials, the alliance prefers to further develop the bilateral cooperative
structures that already exist between NATO and CSTO member states.274
One reason why cooperation is not plausible is the fact that the CSTO is
not institutionalized enough. The levels of institutional development between the
two organizations are simply incompatible. While NATO is highly
institutionalized after 60 years of existence, the CSTO is by comparison still in its
infancy. In addition, the CSTO‟s smaller member states lack the commitment
needed to reach a higher level of institutionalization. This is not to say that it is
not possible for the CSTO to become truly institutionalized but the present
situation clearly prevents the two organizations from working together.
Another theoretical perspective that can be used to analyze whether
cooperation between these organizations may be plausible is social
constructivism. On the one hand, cooperation could be seen as a positive way to
enhance understanding between the two organizations and provide a platform to
gradually form shared interests, which, as mentioned earlier, can only be
developed through interaction. On the other hand, such cooperation would not be
272
Madeleine K. Albright et al., NATO 2020: Assured Security; Dynamic Engagement, 17 May
2010, Brussels: NATO Public Diplomacy Division, p. 30. 273
NATO, “Strategic Concept For the Defence and Security of the Members of the North Atlantic
Treaty Organisation”, 19 November 2010, http://www.nato.int/lisbon2010/strategic-concept-2010-
eng.pdf, accessed 19 November 2010. 274
Kristin Ven Bruusgaard & Morten Jeppesen, op.cit., p. 23.
65
plausible at present because of two major factors: as there is no formal interaction,
the values gap between the two entities is very real and perpetuates the lack of
trust that is partially to blame for the lack of willingness to cooperate. This is then
a vicious cycle where creating mutual understanding and shared interests, let
alone a common identity, is very hard to achieve. Second, were NATO to
recognize the CSTO as an equal and treat it as such, it could be seen as
compromising its core values by essentially validating authoritarian rule and
regional hegemony as a legitimate form, which is practically inconceivable.
In the end, however, it seems that realism provides the best explanation
of why cooperation between the CSTO and NATO is not plausible, namely
through its assumption that states are power seeking, and think in zero-sum terms.
From that perspective, were NATO to formalize ties with the CSTO, this would
result in an increase of Russian influence over other member states of the CSTO
and conversely, a decrease in NATO/US influence in the region. This partly
explains NATO‟s preference for maintaining bilateral ties with members of the
CSTO. Most interestingly in support of this realist assumption is that after a US
State Department cable was released by Wikileaks in early February 2011, it
became relatively clear that the US was amongst those against any establishment
of formal ties between NATO and the CSTO. The cable, originally sent on 10
September 2009 from an inside source in Anders Fogh Rasmussen‟s office who
was apparently feeding US intelligence, reveals that Rasmussen was going to
propose formal engagement with the CSTO in his first speech as Secretary
General of NATO.275
The cable stated that:
NATO Secretary General Rasmussen may be planning to take improved
NATO-Russia relations to a new level by proposing that NATO engage with
the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). [...] To date, the CSTO
has proven ineffective in most areas of activity and has been politically
divided. NATO engagement with the CSTO could enhance the legitimacy of
what may be a waning organization, contributing to a bloc-on-bloc dynamic
reminiscent of the Cold War. Instead, we should focus our efforts on
improving the US relationship with Russia bilaterally and through NATO.276
275
Joshua Kucera, U.S. Blocking NATO-CSTO Cooperation, European Dialogue, 14 February
2011, http://eurodialogue.org/osce/US-Blocking-NATO-CSTO-Cooperation, accessed 14
February 2011. 276
ibid.
66
The cable furthermore stated that NATO‟s EAPC is the proper venue for
engagement with member states of the CSTO as they are all partners in that
Council. This would be preferable to validating the CSTO and thus increasing
Moscow‟s influence over Central Asian and other member states of the CSTO.277
A few days later, the US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton instructed the US
ambassador to NATO Ivo Daalder to raise certain points with Rasmussen before
his speech. He was to strongly urge Rasmussen not to announce any new NATO-
Russia initiatives that had yet to be formally discussed between members of the
organization.278
This US intervention seemingly worked as Rasmussen made no
mention of the CSTO in his speech but focused instead exclusively on enhancing
and strengthening bilateral ties with Russia. From this information, it therefore
becomes abundantly clear that any formal ties with the CSTO are not possible, or
at least for the time being.
277
ibid. 278
ibid.
67
Conclusion
With new global problems threatening the entire World community, one would
have assumed that it is in the common interest of all threatened parties to join
forces in order to better tackle them. That has however not been the case thus far,
as this thesis has illustrated. The underlying reasons behind Western
unwillingness to establish some kind of a new cooperative framework between
two military organizations, namely the CSTO and NATO, do not seem
unjustified. In fact, they seem rather practical and clear-cut.
Interests and identities are not fixed however, but subject to challenges
and interrogation and, thus, to change. As social constructivists point out, actors
are not simply puppets of social structures, since they can challenge and adapt the
„intersubjective structures of meanings‟ of today‟s world order. One way of doing
so is through their communicative practices as noted by Jürgen Habermas.279
According to Habermas, in order for dialogue to be effective and lead to any kind
of evolution, making it eventually possible to change a stalled situation or
relations between interlocutors, several preconditions need to be met. First,
interaction partners have to be able to empathize with each other, that is to see
things from the interlocutor‟s side.280
Second, agents need to share a „common
lifeworld‟, i.e. a set of common views and interpretations of the world and of
themselves, which can be provided by a common history or culture.281
Third,
actors need to recognize each other as equals and have a fair access to the
discourse.282
This last point also implies that other actors have equal access to it,
making the discourse public and visible to all. Only with these three conditions
combined will relationships of power and force be absent.283
279
Jürgen Habermas, Theorie des kommunikativen Handelin, Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, p.
209. Cited in Tomas Risse, op.cit., p. 10. 280
ibid. 281
bid. 282
Tomas Risse, op.cit., p. 11. 283
ibid.
68
Habermas‟ reasoning can be used when the relations, or rather the lack of
them, between the CSTO and NATO are put to the test. As is clear from the
analysis in this thesis, these three preconditions are far from being met at present.
NATO‟s historic inability to grasp or respect Russia‟s vision of NATO‟s
expansion being a threat to its own security is one clear example of a lack of
empathy. Recently, there seems to be a tacit understanding between Russia and
NATO that no new members from the post-Soviet space will be granted
membership in the near term, but it is far from clear that this will ease Russian
concerns to he extent of allowing any real common vision of East European
security. Secondly, the CSTO and NATO member states seem to lack a common
lifeworld, with differing views on how the internal affairs of particular states
should be handled, with the CSTO members believing in strong leadership and
sovereignty on the one hand and with NATO members promoting liberal values
and democratic rule on the other. They also have a differing view on how world
order should be organized and international relations conducted. Russia for
example holds to the idea of the world becoming multipolar with three or four
leading poles, one of them being led by itself, while the US has clung firmly to its
view of a unipolar global order. There are however signs that the world is already
shifting to a multipolar system and that the US will eventually have to adapt to
such reality accordingly. Finally, the limited institutionalization and practical
achievements of the CSTO compared to that of NATO – for instance, the lack of
CSTO intervention operations – has made it difficult for the latter to acknowledge
the former as its equal. The CSTO will therefore not be granted the status of an
„interlocuteur valable‟ with NATO in the foreseeable future.
Of these various obstacles, the more structural and subjective ones
(corresponding to liberal institutionalist and social constructivist analyses) are
inherently less likely to change: but how stable is the realist calculation? The
underlying problem of misunderstanding and tension between Russia and the
West has its ups and downs, and it is not impossible that a future period of greater
relaxation could open more scope for reassessing the CSTO. During 2010 when
NATO was seeking „re-set‟ in its own relations with Russia, Western states raised
no objection to actions taken by the Kazakhstan Chairman-in-Office of OSCE that
in practice gave the CSTO greater recognition and representation than before in
that institution‟s work. A more specific and stronger realist motive for at least
69
tolerating a CSTO role might perhaps arise after eventual NATO withdrawal from
Afghanistan, when the task of containing disorder and non-state threats from that
country would fall on others. If the CSTO increased its effectiveness on the basis
of a manifest joint interest of its members in meeting this challenge, its success
would be in Western interests even while its methods might offend Western
sensibilities.
For the present, the realization of a framework of a combined security
space seems to depend too much on the relationship between the United States
and Russia: they both hold a leading role in their respective organizations and
have been able to use that position in getting many of their national interests
across, even or especially when using institutions as „multipliers‟ for national
influence. By comparison, NATO‟s handling of the SCO is interesting, as the
latter is also a very young organization led by both China and Russia. Although
there were misgivings in the beginning about the intentions and motives of the
SCO, NATO‟s attitude towards the SCO has been much more open and
enthusiastic than it has been towards the CSTO. There are at least two reasons for
this; firstly, the SCO is not solely dominated by Russia, but probably owes its
main inspiration and dynamics to China which has not had an antagonistic
relationship with NATO in the past. In addition, the SCO is not a military alliance
but much rather a regional cooperation organization covering a wide range of
security dimensions plus economic and energy affairs. Secondly, the SCO
presents itself as a new type of regional organization, covering a space which has
no shared institutional traditions from the Cold War, and is in no way trying to
emulate NATO with regards to structure and operational capability. The CSTO
however has always been viewed by NATO as a paper institution trying to mirror
its structure and only copying its operational procedures.
It is like a story of two brothers where the elder has excelled in playing the
piano and is recognized worldwide as a leading artist. The younger brother, full of
admiration for his successful elder brother, has come of age and taken up the
piano as well. He practices hard and wants to reach the same level of success as
his older brother but the gap between them was already so great that the likelihood
of catching up and being able to play alongside him is low. Incidentally, they find
out that they have a half-brother in another village who also happens to play an
70
instrument, except that he has taken up the violin and has attracted quite some
attention. The latter, corresponding to the SCO, is likely to be a more congenial
partner for both the original brothers.
The fundamental question for the CSTO is thus whether it should continue
to play the piano or whether it should perhaps take up another instrument. If the
CSTO is not able to further institutionalize and create more harmony among its
members, the latter option might be feasible. But as any musician will tell you,
practice is the key to success and patience is a virtue. Staying the course and
focusing on developing the CSTO as an organization that will be capable to step
in and work with NATO, or even take over from it, as has been suggested in the
case of Afghanistan, is probably the wisest choice at present.
71
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List of abbreviations (acronyms)
ATC Anti-Terror Center
ATU The Action against Terrorism Unit
CCS The Council on Collective Security
CFSP Common Foreign and Security Policy
CIS The Commonwealth of Independent States
CMFA The Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs
CMD The Council of Ministers of Defence
CPF The Collective Peacekeeping Forces
CRRF The Collective Rapid Reaction Force
CSSC The Committee of Secretaries of the Security Councils
CST The Collective Security Treaty
CSTO The Collective Security Treaty Organization
EAG The Eurasian Group on Combating Money Laundering and
Financing Terrorism
EU The European Union
EAPC The Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council
EST European Security Treaty
FSB Federal Security Service
GDP Gross Domestic Product
GUAM The Organization for Democracy and Economic Development
IMU The Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan
IR International Relations
ISAF The International Security Assistance Force
NACC The North Atlantic Cooperation Council
NATO The North Atlantic Treaty Organization
NRC The NATO-Russia Council
OSCE The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
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PfP The Partnership for Peace
PJC The Permanent Joint Council
SG Secretary-General
SCO The Shangaï Cooperation Organization
UK The United Kingdom
UN The United Nations
US The United States